Dictionary Definition
venom
Noun
1 toxin secreted by animals; secreted by certain
snakes and poisonous insects (e.g., spiders and scorpions)
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
Translations
poison
- Albanian: helm
- Czech: jed
- Danish: gift
- Dutch: gif , venijn
- Finnish: myrkky
- French: venin
- German: Gift
- Greek: δηλητήριο
- Interlingua: veneno
- Italian: veleno
- Latin: virus venenum
- Norwegian: gift
- Polish: jad
- Portuguese: veneno
- Romanian: venin
- Russian: яд
- Spanish: veneno
- Swedish: gift
- Volapük: venen, venod, venom
(figurative) malice
Noun
venom- poison, venom
Extensive Definition
- This article is about the class of biotoxins. For other uses, see Venom (disambiguation) and Venomous (disambiguation).
The animals most widely known to use venom are
snakes, some species of
which inject venom into their prey through hollow fangs; spiders
and centipedes, which
also inject venom through fangs; scorpions and stinging insects, which inject venom with
a sting (which, in insects such as bees and wasps, is a modified egg-laying
device – the ovipositor). Many caterpillars have defensive
venom glands associated with specialized bristles on the body,
known as urticating
hairs, and can be lethal to humans (e.g., that of the Lonomia moth).
Venom is also found in a few reptiles besides snakes, such as the
gila
monster and Mexican
beaded lizard. Other insects, such as true bugs
http://ufbir.ifas.ufl.edu/Chap23.htm
and many ants, also produce
venom. Venom can also be found in some fish, such as the cartilaginous
fishes – stingrays,
sharks, and chimaeras – and the teleost fishes including
monognathus eels,
catfishes, stonefishes and waspfishes,
scorpionfishes and
lionfishes, gurnard
perches, rabbitfishes, surgeonfishes, scats,
stargazers, weevers, carangids, saber-toothed
blenny, and toadfish. In fact, recent
studies have shown that there are more venomous ray-finned fishes
than all other venomous vertebrates combined. There
are many other venomous invertebrates, including jellyfish and cone snails.
The box
jellyfish is widely considered the most venomous creature in
the world.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_jellyfish#treatmentofstings
Some mammals are also venomous, including solenodons, shrews, the slow loris,
and the male platypus.
Because they are tasked to defend their hives and
food stores, bees synthesize and employ an acidic venom (apitoxin) to cause pain in
those that they sting, whereas wasps use a chemically different
venom designed to paralyze prey, so it can be stored alive in the
food chambers of their young. The use of venom is much more
widespread than just these examples, of course.
Venomous vs. poisonous
There is a difference between organisms that are "venomous" and those that are "poisonous", two commonly confused terms applied to plant and animal life. Venomous, as stated above, refers to animals that deliver (often, inject) venom into their prey when hunting or as a defense mechanism. Poisonous, on the other hand, describes plants or animals that are harmful when consumed or touched. A poison tends to be distributed over a large part of the body of the organism producing it, while venom is typically propduced in organs specialized for the purpose. One species of bird, the hooded pitohui, although not venomous, is poisonous, secreting a neurotoxin onto its skin and feathers. The slow loris, a primate, blurs the boundary between poisonous and venomous; it has poison-secreting patches on the inside of its elbows which it is believed to smear on its young to prevent them from being eaten. However, it will also lick these patches, giving it a venomous bite.Snake venom
Snake venom is produced by glands below the eye and delivered to the victim through tubular or channeled fangs. Snake poisons contain a variety of peptide toxins. Snakes use their venom principally for hunting, though the threat of being bitten serves also as a defense. Snake bites cause a variety of symptoms including pain, swelling, tissue damage, low blood pressure, convulsions, and hemorrhaging (varying by species of snake).Doctors treat victims of a venomous bite with
antivenin, which is
created by dosing an animal such as a sheep, horse, goat, or rabbit with a small amount of the
targeted venom. The immune system of the subject animal responds to
the dose, producing antibodies to the venom's
active molecule; the antibodies can then be harvested from the
animal's blood and applied to treat envenomation in others. This
treatment can be used effectively only a limited number of times
for a given person, however, as that person will ultimately develop
antibodies to neutralize the foreign animal antibodies injected
into him (anti-antibody antibodies). Even if that person does not
suffer a serious allergic reaction to the antivenom, his own immune
system can destroy the antivenin before the antivenin can destroy
the venom. Though most people never require even one treatment of
antivenin in their lifetime, let alone several, people who work
with snakes or other venomous animals may. Fortunately, these
people often develop antibodies of their own against the venom of
whatever animals they handle, and thereby are protected without the
assistance of exogenous antibodies.
Aristolochia rugosa and Aristolochia trilobata or "Dutchman's
Pipe" are recorded in a list of plants used worldwide and in the
West Indies, South and Central America against snakebites and
scorpion stings. Aristolochic
acid inhibits inflammation induced by immune complexes, and
nonimmunological agents (carrageenan or croton oil). Aristolochic
acid inhibits the activity of snake venom phospholipase (PLA2) by
forming a 1:1 complex with the enzyme. Since phospholipase enzymes
play a significant part in the cascade leading to the inflammatory
and pain response, their inhibition could lead to relief of
problems from scorpion envenomation.
See also
Notes
Bibliography
- Leo Smith and Ward C. Wheeler. 2006. Venom evolution widespread in fishes: A phylogenetic road map for the bioprospecting of piscine venoms. Journal of Heredity 97(3): 206-217.
- Lans C, Harper T, Georges K, Bridgewater E. 2001. Medicinal and ethnoveterinary remedies of hunters in Trinidad. BMC Complement Altern Med. 2001;1:10. Epub 2001 Nov 30. http://www.biomedcentral.com/1472-6882/1/10
venom in Arabic: فينوم
venom in Esperanto: Ĉasveneno
venom in French: Venin
venom in Indonesian: Bisa
venom in Hebrew: ארס
venom in Polish: Jad
venom in Portuguese: Peçonha
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
abomination, acaricide, acrimony, acuteness, animality, animosity, animus, antagonism, anthelmintic, antibiotic, antiseptic, atrocity, bad, bad blood, bane, barbarity, befoulment, bitter feeling,
bitterness, blight, bloodlust, brutality, bug bomb, carbamate
insecticide, chemosterilant,
chlorinated hydrocarbon insecticide, communicability, contact
poison, contagion,
contagiousness,
corruption, crying
evil, damage, deadliness, defilement, defoliant, despoliation, destruction, destructiveness,
detriment, disinfectant, eradicant, evil, extremity, ferociousness, feud, fierceness, force, fumigant, fungicide, furiousness, gall, germicide, grievance, hard feelings,
harm, harshness, hate, hatred, havoc, herbicide, hostility, hurt, ill, ill blood, ill feeling, ill
will, impetuosity,
inclemency, infection, infectiousness, infectivity, inhumanity, injury, insect powder, insecticide, intensity, malevolence, malice, maliciousness, malignancy, malignity, mercilessness, microbicide, mindlessness, mischief, miticide, murderousness, noxiousness, organic
chlorine, organic phosphate insecticide, outrage, pesticide, pitilessness, poison, poisonousness, pollution, rancor, rat poison, rigor, roach paste, roach powder,
rodenticide,
roughness, savagery, severity, sharpness, soreness, sourness, spite, spitefulness, spleen, stomach poison, systemic, systemic insecticide,
terrorism, the worst,
toxic, toxicant, toxicity, toxin, ungentleness, vandalism, vehemence, vendetta, venin, venomousness, vermicide, vexation, viciousness, violence, virulence, virulency, virus, vitriol, weed killer, woe, wrong