i presume PLB means a locator beacon?! i don't have one or can afford one and mobile phone reception can be bad or non existent even just a few kilometres from civilisation over here so i'm afraid getting to the nearest road and from there to the hospital by myself is the only option :-( (somewhat off topic but given the slow response to one gun related incident and no reaction from authorities (local cops + 911) in a second incident after the culprit's legal guns were confiscated i've not much confidence in help from them.... the shooter still remains a free being despite having raped his own 13y.o. daughter and gotten her pregnant about 4years ago -- welcome to the dark side of Costa Rica...)
i'm no doctor, nurse or herpetologist, but if you put a pressure bandage on a viper bite doesn't that mean concentrating the hemotoxin in the bitten area and greater risk of permanent tissue damage as result?! (not trying to be a smarta***, just curious as loosing a limb doesn't sound exiting...)
HI FD. Yes a PLB is a locating beacon and is a must have down here in the land of Oz. The whole comms question is again an ongoing thing and can become a layered system from a phone, UHF/VHF radio, sat phone, and PLB.
As for the not using PIB for a north hemisphere bite is still an area where people get quite passionate about how to treat a bite in the field. In the states A Dr Ben Abo is the main snake guy and works with Venom 1&2 response units in Miami.
Venom Response identifies and captures snakes, provides antivenom, assists with patient care, educates the public and much more. Venom Response identifies and captures snakes, provides antivenom, assists with patient care, educates the public and much more. Venom Response identifies and captures...
www.miamidade.gov
And in Aus we have melbourne uni doing all the research in to snakes venom.
Australian Venom Research Unit page in the School of Biomedical Sciences site. venom, venom expert, snake, snakebite, jellyfish, bee, spider
biomedicalsciences.unimelb.edu.au
According to the Wilderness Medical Society guidelines to Reptile Envenomations this the basic run down.
Pit vipers treat systemic signs and symptoms clean the wound and dress DO NOT use pressure bandages, TQ etc and get to hospital ASAP
Elapidae again treat any systemic signs and symptoms use pressure immobilisation bandage on effected limb and get to hospital.
Gila Monsters or Goanas they cant envonmate like a snake but the venom is in sacks in the gum area and will drool into the wound of a bite and do cause instant pain. Treat as a pit viper bite.
In the end prevention is the best course. I once had to treat and get flown off an island a resident of Costa Rica who was on holiday here. Tried to impress a young lady with his snake handling skills and got bitten for his troubles plus a $10000 USD cost for the helo retrieval. DO NOT TOUCH SNAKES.