How to survive a cobra bite — or better yet, avoid one entirely
By Forrest Brown and Kocha Olarn, CNN
Thailand is full of snakes — more than 200 species, including cobras. That might be unsettling for some people, but it was ideal for Prangmart Charoenwai as a boy in southern Thailand.
He was intrigued by the reptiles. He once captured a nonvenomous sunbeam snake, letting it go days later when he couldn’t feed it properly. He watched online videos to learn techniques in grabbing them, he told CNN.
He saw his first cobra when he was about 15 or 16.
“It was quite big,” Prangmart, now 39, said. “I later saw that snake spread its hood. I stood there watching its behavior. It threatened me, but I felt it was not scary. … I thought it was beautiful.”
His fascination and confidence grew, but his good fortune with cobras didn’t last.
In April 2021, the market owner went out on a mission in Trang province in southern Thailand with his rescue group, which responds to routine emergency response tasks, including snake-catching.
Residents in the area said they were concerned about some king cobras. Prangmart arrived at the site with about 15 team members.
They didn’t find any cobras the first day, but that changed the next day after some thick brush and overgrown vines were cleared out.
“I saw a hole in a big rock where I spotted a snake’s tail, and it looked like it was going into that hole,” Prangmart recalled. “I ran there quickly, and then used a hook to try to get it out.”
But the snake eluded the device.
“Due to my carelessness, because I have been working in this area for too long, I decided to use my bare hand to snatch the cobra’s tail out.”
That impulsive grab turned out to be a major miscalculation.
Cobras and their world
Cobras have an extensive range — from much of Africa into the Middle East, then into India and the rest of South Asia. From there, they continue into Southeast Asia and Indonesia. That puts them in potential contact with billions of people.
They belong to the elapid family of snakes, which has roughly 300 venomous species. Coral snakes, sea snakes, mambas and kraits are also in this group.
There are about 30 cobra species, according to expert Rom Whitaker, who helped start the Madras Crocodile Bank Trust in India. (Its spinoff, the Irula Snake-catchers Industrial Cooperative Society, supplies the venom used to produce life-saving antivenom to India).
Whitaker said he uses an approximation of the number of species because cobra taxonomy often changes as experts learn more about the snakes. Africa accounts for roughly two-thirds of the species.
Generally, cobras deliver a neurotoxin, which interferes with nerve impulses and can cause paralysis of the heart and lungs. That’s different from that of many vipers, such as rattlesnakes. They generally have a hemotoxin that attacks the blood vessels and causes bleeding and tissue damage.
But Nick Brandehoff, who practices emergency medicine and medical toxicology in Colorado and California, said he and other experts are learning that snake venom is more complicated than that simple breakdown. Some elapids have hemotoxic properties, and some vipers have neurotoxic properties. It can vary from snake to snake.
Either way, venomous snakebites are a serious problem in many tropical regions. Only an average of five people die a year of venomous snakebites in the United States, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
But the World Health Organization estimates around 81,000 to 138,000 people die each year worldwide from snakebites, while about three times that many people live with permanent disabilities.
Aggressive or defensive?
Despite the high number of deaths and envenomings (bites in which venom is delivered into the body), don’t assume cobras are aggressive.
“Cobras are shy snakes, and though they make a dramatic show when cornered and alarmed, rearing up, spreading a hood, and hissing loudly, this is stark fear, not aggression,” said Whitaker. “The snake only wants to be left alone.”
Brandehoff, who helps run the Asclepius Snakebite Foundation, added that “they’re typical of most other snakes in that they don’t want human contact.” And he emphasized cobras don’t chase people.
Kim Gray, curator of herpetology and ichthyology with the San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance, cited another reason cobras don’t like to bite people.
“Venom is valuable to the snake, and it is used to immobilize prey and begin the digestion process, which the snake needs because it eats whole food items and has no limbs to help it in this process,” Gray said.
“So it does not want to waste its venom by recklessly biting and envenoming all the humans it can encounter.”
Biting is a last resort if its typical warning signs to back off don’t work, she said.
Are tourists at risk?
The vast majority of cobra bites happen to agricultural workers in fields and other locals, often low-income people living in easy-to-enter dwellings and who sleep on the floor, Brandehoff said.
“Though people have an idea that the ‘jungle is full of snakes,’ that’s really not true,” Whitaker added. “Cobras are most common in agricultural areas thanks to the proliferation of their favorite prey: rats and mice.
“Alert snakes like cobras are frightened of humans and usually flee or freeze when a human approaches. The odds of encountering a cobra on the usual tourist routes in India or Thailand are very slim.”
People staying in hotels with full facilities in a city have less to worry about than those in rural, rustic facilities, Gray said.
If you do find yourself bedding down in a place more likely to attract cobras, she suggested:
• Keep debris away from the shelter
• Clean up food and grains that might attract rats
• Try to keep furniture higher up off the floor and sleep in an elevated bed.
Whitaker said it is essential to shine a flashlight when walking at night and not put your hands in thick, bushy spots.
What to do if you spot a cobra
The experts are unanimous: Leave the snake alone.
“Move deliberately and calmly away from the snake — while keeping an eye on its location if possible,” Gray said. “Move to an open area free of brush and rock outcrops if possible” if you’re outdoors.
“Do not try to restrain it, capture it or kill it with a broom or shovel or anything,” she emphasized.
Brandehoff concurred. “Give it its space. You are a large mammalian predator to them. They do not want to engage you.”
Whitaker said that bites “usually don’t happen from the strike of a cobra in the hooded posture but … happen when the snake is stressed by being stepped upon or mistakenly grabbed.”
What should you do if you chance on a cobra that’s already really close and seems ready to strike?
“Move quickly away,” Gray said. “Human reaction time is so slow compared to their strike so there may not be much you can do — but typically the trajectory of the cobra’s bite is forward and downward, and they are not able to change direction mid-strike, so perhaps a sideways rapid move away from the snake may be beneficial.”
A serious misstep in capturing a cobra
Prangmart Charoenwai’s impulsive maneuver to grab an escaping cobra cost him.
“The hole was not deep; the snake made a U-turn out quicker than I thought.”
That’s when it happened. Prangmart got bit on his left thumb. Then he got bit on his right hand.
Despite the strikes, Prangmart was determined to capture and bag the cobra himself since he was already bitten — even though his left hand was already getting numb.
“I was told to step aside; I refused. Instead, they told me to stay chilled and urged me to quickly go to the hospital and treat my wound.”
They finally bagged the cobra, and Prangmart was able to walk to an ambulance. But his trouble had just started — the hospital was two hours away.
What to do if you are bitten
As Prangmart was learning the hard way, cobra bites are very serious business. But they are by no means a death sentence.
“Most snakebites, even cobra bites, are not fatal.” Whitaker said. “But any snakebite must be treated as a medical emergency.
“The single most important thing to do is to get to a hospital without any delay. Do not resort to any local or home remedy because there is only one cure for a snakebite and that is antivenom.”
Gray said that you should try to stay calm and “immobilize the limb that was bitten, get to the closest hospital without delay (and) make a note of where the bite occurred and the time the bite occurred.”
Also, get a description or photo of the snake if it can be taken safely. This can help doctors with treatment, she said.
Do not tie a tourniquet or try the old “cut and suction” method, Whitaker said, nor should you use a so-called “snakebite kit.”
Brandehoff said that if the bite comes from a cobra with strictly neurotoxic venom, people may recommend a crepe wrap, which can help reduce the spread of the venom from a limb to the rest of the body via compression.
“The problem with that is most people don’t know what kind of snake bit them” and that it’s not reasonable to expect people to readily ID various cobra species.
And if the venom has hemotoxic properties, a wrap can cause more harm than good, damaging tissue around the bite area, he said.
Rings and other jewelry should be removed.
“The earlier antivenom can be administered, the better your chances of not having long-term disability or potentially dying,” he said.
Spitting cobras can cause “venom ophthalmoplegia,” which is basically burning of the eyes, Brandehoff said. Permanent damage can occur but is rarer.
The main treatment is washing the eyes “copiously,” he said.
‘I thought I may not make it’
Prangmart’s arrival at the hospital in Thailand did not end his emergency. “After I received the serum, I had an allergic reaction,” he said.
“I started to have short breaths, rashes. The doctor had to rush back and treated me again. I was watched regularly during that time.”
Was he afraid he would die?
“The severe conditions I had to endure at the hospital lasted about two hours. It was when I thought I may not make it. My heart rate was racing, too.”
Prangmart pulled through the immediate crisis but then embarked on a 15-day ordeal, bouncing between Western medical doctors and practitioners of Thai traditional medicine to try to save his left hand, where repeated infections threatened to spread.
He eventually got better, but he’s left with a big scar, an important reminder for him and the rest of his team.
“At that time when I saw the snake, I felt excited and I didn’t want it to escape into the hole. Because of that excitement, I hurriedly grabbed the snake. What happened to me, it was my own carelessness.”
And if someone else should encounter a cobra?
“Keep calm and watch it; don’t hurry, turn your back and run. … If you are very scared, start to retreat backward step by step,” he said. “Generally, these snakes are not likely to attack people first unless there is clear threat to them.”
Why cobras aren’t our enemies
Cobras keep the environment in balance.
“Without cobras, the rodent problem in agricultural areas could lead to famine,” Whitaker said. “These are the most efficient rodent predators in existence, able to enter rat burrows and clean out the entire family.”
But he said antivenom efforts must continue.
“Those of us who appreciate and respect snakes need to support programs to help reduce the tremendous burden of snakebites affecting tens of millions of rural people in Africa, Asia and South America,” Whitaker said.
Brandehoff agreed: “We can’t attempt to eradicate snakebites like we can malaria. The best thing we can do is try to mitigate snakebites by trying to minimize contacts.”
We need to “learn to live with them. … In a lot of cultures, there’s a lot of fear of snakes. See a snake, kill a snake; it’s not helpful.”
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Top image: A monocled cobra. (iStockphoto/Getty Images)