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'THE PAIN WAS LIKE FIRE': Seaside teacher sucked the venom from a snake bite and helped save a life
Rick Sprouse of Santa Rosa Beach almost lost his arm — and his life — after being bit by a water moccasin recently.
But thanks to his quick-thinking roommate, Sprouse is alive to tell the tale.
Sprouse, along with Seaside teacher Charlotte Sause, came across two water moccasins while he was helping her clean out the barn on her 5.6-acre farm in late October.
“Charlotte was out in the barn feeding the horses,” Rick said. “She came and got me because the snakes didn’t look like water moccasins and she wasn’t sure if they were poisonous.”
Normally Rick would just grab his shotgun and take care of business, but he was out of shells, so he had to resort to using his .22.
“That is all I had,” Rick said. “I shot each of them twice.”
The snakes were still squirming, so Rick just pinned the first snake’s head down and picked it up in his right hand while bending down to pick up the second snake.
As soon as he turned to walk out of the barn he was in trouble.
“The one in my left hand sunk its teeth in and bit all the way through my thumb,” Rick said.
The snake wouldn’t let go. Rick said that he was literally shaking his arm “back and forth trying to get the snake to let go.”
“While most snakes will not give you all of their venom,” Rick said. “I think since this one was dying, he gave me all of it.”
He said the pain came within minutes of being bitten.
“The pain in my hand was like fire,” he said. “By the time we got to the house, the pain was up to my shoulder and my whole arm began to swell up.”
Rick said he normally has a snake bite kit handy, but they didn’t have it with them this time.
Immediately after he was bitten, he knew it was serious.
“It was the worst pain that I have ever felt,” he said. “I was throwing up all the way back to the house.”
This is when Charlotte took over and calmly walked Rick into the house and began to rinse the wound with hydrogen peroxide.
“I don’t know what I was thinking,” Charlotte said. “I just stuck his thumb in my mouth and started to suck the venom out.”
She said that she had never done something like this before and that it happened so fast she didn’t really think about what she was doing.
“I saw how much pain he was in so I knew it was bad,” Charlotte said. “I have seen those little snake bite kits and there is no way it would have worked.”
Charlotte just sat there sucking the venom out and spitting it into the sink.
“The taste was horrible and I couldn’t feel my tongue,” she said. “But I kept going.”
Charlotte described the taste as if you had drunk orange juice just after brushing your teeth.
Typically with a snake bite kit, you have a string that can be used to tie off the area, then you cut into the wound with the provided razor and use the suction mechanism to draw the venom out.
Charlotte applied a tourniquet to Rick’s lower arm and then another near his shoulder while a friend called the hospital in advance and alerted them to the situation.
“They were waiting for us,” Rick said. “They wanted to immediately get me to Pensacola.”
Once Rick was in Pensacola, he received 12 bags of anti-venom, in addition to the doses of morphine and dilaudid he was already given in the ambulance.
Rick was in the intensive care unit for three days and his arm swelled to almost 24 inches around.
“They wanted to amputate my arm,” Rick said. “The doctors told me if it hadn’t been for the tourniquets and Charlotte sucking the venom out, it would have been life threatening.”
Now that Rick is home and feeling better, the two can sit back and re-think what happened and learn from it.
“No matter what,” Charlotte said. “If you are not sure of the snake, you shouldn’t handle it.”
She said that water moccasins are terribly aggressive and that she has seen them go after her horses in the barn.
Charlotte said that if she had to do it all over again she would not hesitate.
“I would do the exact same thing,” she said. “I’m not suggesting people suck venom out of people, because it could hurt them too.”
Kim Gordon, who teaches at Seaside Elementary School with Charlotte, was amazed by the quick thinking of her friend and colleague.
“How many people can say they helped save a life?” Gordon said. “This is a story of calmness, and a willingness to do what it takes in the face of an emergency.”
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| on youtube there is a very good video by Kentucky Reptile Zoo on snake bite myths I think there is 5 parts just search KRZ |
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| Dale - Jan 10, 2010 07:50:34 PM | Remove Comment |
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| I am so glad you are ok. Here is a tip from an old snake killer. Use a hoe. it works great. |
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| ann orr - Dec 26, 2009 05:49:08 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Jessica, all the more reason to get him to the hospital as quickly as possible. Once venom has reached the blood stream, there is nothing you going to be able to do to reverse it back out. There might be residual amounts around the wound, but the removal from the injected amount, is insignificant to nonexistent. I have worked in a hemo lab and have studied what happens during an envenomation. She only did what she was told to do by outdated instructions, and I commend her efforts. However, it's articles such as this that only further the trend. Knowledge should have been a little bit more on the mind of the author. |
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| Gerald - Dec 20, 2009 09:39:37 AM | Remove Comment |
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| Great effort on the part of his wife. However, her ignorance could have killed him. Putting a tourniquet is harmful and more dangerous.
Snakes don't "go after" anything, let a lone a huge equine.
I suggest moving the snake with a stick, or some other inanimate object that can't die.
Articles like this only further inhibit the uncultivated minds of our country. |
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| Jake - Dec 20, 2009 09:19:07 AM | Remove Comment |
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| Do not suck the venom out of wound. It won't work and wastes time.
Do not follow the "snakebit kit" advice given in the article. It will do far more harm than good.
Water moccasins are not terribly aggressive. Nearly all bites take place in situations such as this one, where a person needlessly handled a venomous snake.
If you see a venomous snake, the best protocol is to leave it alone. You will not be bit if you follow that advice. If you are bit by a venomous snake, the most important thing is to stay calm and get to a hospital immediately. All the other folk remedies are useless at best and waste time. |
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| Jonathan - Dec 20, 2009 02:35:56 AM | Remove Comment |
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| Jessica, the point people are trying to make is not that a valiant effort wasn't made, but that nothing she did was of any benefit. You can suck a snakebite till you turn blue, it doesn't remove very much if any venom. Wasted time that should have been spent in transporting the victim. And while in your case it may have been true that risking a limb to save a life with a tourniquet,probably not, unless you were hours away from medical care I'm sure that's probably not what was being thought at the time, and the tourniquet was applied because she thought that was proper snakebite protocol. I hope everything works out well for him and in the future he remembers that the best treatment for snakebite is PREVENTION. Just leave them alone, or find a professional to move it. |
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| Don - Dec 14, 2009 10:19:40 AM | Remove Comment |
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| I agree with everyone else, this is exactly what you should not do.
Do not try to pick up the snake.
Do not use a tourniquet.
Do not try to suck out the venom.
Do not make an incision to suck out the venom.
The only thing this article is missing is applying ice and then we could completely be in Bizaro world. |
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| Ben - Dec 12, 2009 03:39:35 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Such harsh words, how can you say that the information is inaccurate? Did the author just make it up? Or maybe he just told you what he was told. I agree he should have listed the way to handle things now, but at one point this was how it was done. |
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| Evan - Dec 11, 2009 05:57:21 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Regardless of whether or not she did the right thing, and I don't know enough about snake bites to know, Charlotte risked her life and did what she thought she needed to do to save my brother. For that she has my deepest and sincerest gratitude. She is a rock star! |
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| Robin - Dec 11, 2009 03:16:55 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Jessica I know that you believe that sucking on the bite wound saved your father's life. But, as others have mentioned that's just not the case. I was taught that myself years ago in boy scouts, but it is just not the correct action anymore. Just imagine a glass of water, and you drop a drop of food coloring into it. Do you think you could suck out enough of the food coloring to make a difference?
I'm sorry your dad was injured but if he had just left those snakes alone this whole incident could have been avoided. Most bites happen from someone trying to kill or pick up a snake.
I hope he recovers fully and learns to leave venomous snakes alone, or call an experienced person to remove them humanely. |
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| Brandon - Dec 11, 2009 01:07:47 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Hi my name is Jessica Sprouse, and Richard Sprouse is my dad. I just want to clarify something for all the people who commented on this post saying that it was stupid and useless for Charlotte to suck the venom out. My dad has a heart problem and has to take a large amount of coumadin everyday to keep his blood thin. Because his blood was so thin, the venom would have been able to reach his heart so much faster than it would for anyone else. Because she sucked out as much venom as she could, she was able to prevent the venom from reaching his heart, and saved his life. Its true that putting a tourniquet on allows the venom to sit in one place which can cause extreme damage to that area of the body. But in a situation like this, it was a choice of either risking losing an arm, or losing a life. Of course it is never recommended that someone suck the venom out on their own, and that if someone is bitten by a snake, the best course of action is to immediately get to a hospital. But this article is just showing how one person with a unique circumstance got lucky because someone was willing to put herself at risk, despite knowing how dangerous it could be for her, in order to help insure that my dad survived. Thanks Charlotte! |
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| Jessica Sprouse - Dec 10, 2009 03:11:27 PM | Remove Comment |
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| If nothing else, this is a humorous story to read, if not just plain sad. Extremely inaccurate, I question whether even the victim was present during these occurrences! |
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| Mark - Dec 06, 2009 08:13:47 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Wouldn't it have been nice if the author, Matt, had actually done some research and printed the correct, medically accepted ways to deal with a snakebite! Clearly, responsible reporting is a thing of the past. Sad to see so much misinformation printed as news. |
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| Karl - Dec 03, 2009 11:48:10 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Wow! I didn't realize that you could fit so many factual inaccuracies into such a short article. I will just say that cottonmouths are NOT aggressive Try google scholar - Xavier Glaudas for scientific study to support my assertion. Also, THE ONLY first aid for snakebite in the US is to get the victim to the hospital as quicly and safely as possible. Unless you are properly trained attempting anything else simply delays REAL treatment. |
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| Josh - Dec 02, 2009 12:34:45 PM | Remove Comment |
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| Wow, as a professional herpetologist, sadly this article has more inaccurate info then I thought possible. I hope others do not copy these techniques if ever in the same situation. What happened here was pure luck. |
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| Dino - Dec 02, 2009 09:08:54 AM | Remove Comment |
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| Venom should NEVER attempted to be sucked from a snake bite. A tourniquet should NEVER be applied to the bite of any Viper. Applying a tourniquet allows the venom to sit in one area and do extreme damage. Attempting to suck out venom, rarely extracts much if any venom. In addition the person sucking exposes themselves, Needlessly, to disease and possible envenomation through an oral opening such as cavity or bitten lip or tongue. All in all, this article is a WHAT NOT TO DO. |
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| George - Dec 02, 2009 08:21:18 AM | Remove Comment |
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| Sucking the wound does NOTHING. What she tasted was blood. All she did was wasted time in transporting him to the hospital. Glad he'll be OK, but cottonmouth bites are rarely fatal with proper treatment. |
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| Marty - Dec 02, 2009 06:41:53 AM | Remove Comment |
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| Search youtube with query 'mikecatadjuster' and you will find videos I've made of willife and snakes of this area, including cottonmouth/watermoaccsin from the 30A area. I also have numerous videos of marine life of the area. Interesting stuff! |
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| Michael Ferguson - Nov 27, 2009 01:57:36 AM | Remove Comment |



