Khaleej Times

UK snake man’s venom habit holds hope for new antidote

- AFP

london — For nearly 30 years, London-based reptile enthusiast and musician Steve Ludwin has been injecting snake venom — a practice that has almost killed him.

It may now help save thousands of lives, as researcher­s search for a new antidote based on his body’s response to the toxic fluids.

“It sounds very crazy what I am doing but it turns out that it potentiall­y has lots of health benefits,” Ludwin, the tattooed 51-year-old said in the living room of his home in the British capital.

Ludwin demonstrat­ed his decades-old habit by firmly holding the head of a green Pope’s tree viper — Trimeresur­us popeiorum — and extracting a few drops of its venom. Minutes later, he has injected the fluid into his arm using a syringe.

Over the years Ludwin has injected the venom of some of the world’s most dangerous snakes, including the black mamba and cobras.

He claimed it has strengthen­ed his immune system so much he has not suffered from a cold in 15 years. But it has not been all positive. “I have had quite a few accidents”, Ludwin said, recalling he once ended up in a London hospital’s intensive care unit for three days following an overdose. “It’s a very very dangerous thing to do, I don’t encourage people to do it”.

“The sensation of injecting snake venom is not pleasant at all...it’s not like a Jim Morrison trip. You don’t trip — it’s extreme pain”, said Ludwin, who wears a snake pendant.

His habit has taken on new meaning in recent years after a team of researcher­s at the University of Copenhagen embarked on producing an anti-venom using his antibodies.

“When he injects venom, his immune system responds,” Brian Lohse, a professor at the faculty of health and medical sciences at the University of Copenhagen, said in a phone interview. “What we expect is to find copies of his antibodies, isolate them, test them, and eventually set up a production of them.”

Four full-time researcher­s, who began work in 2013, expect to complete the project within a year.

If successful, it would be the first human-derived anti-venom made from a donor who has injected himself with different snake venoms.

Antidotes to date have been harnessed by collecting antibodies from animals, usually horses, that have been given venom.

“Today’s animal-derived antibodies are quite expensive in hospital settings,” said Lohse. “Our anti-venoms are aimed to cost a hundred dollars and we hope to make it freely available in countries where people are bitten every day and people die every day,” he added. —

 ?? AFP ?? Steve Ludwin handles a Pope’s Pit Viper at his apartment in Kennington, south London. —
AFP Steve Ludwin handles a Pope’s Pit Viper at his apartment in Kennington, south London. —

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