The National - News

BAD NEWS FOR ARACHNOPHO­BES WITH JUMP IN REDBACK SPIDERS

▶ Experts advise bite victims to seek medical treatment immediatel­y

- PATRICK RYAN

More potentiall­y lethal redback spiders are sneaking into the UAE, hiding in imported plants and fruit, and even in people’s luggage.

The venomous spider is commonly found in Australia and Asia, but there has been a recent surge of sightings in the Emirates.

While there have been no deaths attributed to the spider in the country, a doctor urged people who think they may have been bitten by a redback to seek treatment.

One such person is Lee Tunnicliff­e, 38, of Dubai. Doctors told the sales manager for Dance FM she could have died had she delayed getting to hospital any longer after being bitten last month.

“I don’t know when I was bitten,” she said. “I noticed it only when I brushed up against a desk at home and felt an unusual amount of pain. The bite looked like a golf ball with two fang marks in it.

“When I went to the pharmacy they told me to keep aloe vera on it and not to worry, because you don’t get poisonous spiders over here.”

Six days later, the bite had increased in size so much so that Ms Tunnicliff­e, who is from Scotland, was advised to go to hospital by her mother.

“They told me it was quite serious and was definitely a bug bite.

“I had a skin infection called cellulitis that had been caused by the skin being broken. The pain was white hot and searing.

“Each day I drew a circle around it to see if it was getting bigger.

At one point the redness was the size of a badminton racquet head.”

She said she was still in a lot of pain despite having had treatment for the bite.

“It feels like a burn. The doctor said if I had left it any longer, the infection could have gone into the lymph nodes and it could have been fatal,” she said.

Dr Yusr Jaafir, from Medeor 24x7 Internatio­nal Hospital, Al Ain, said that while redback spiders were not common in the UAE there had definitely been an increase in sightings.

The creatures, named after the prominent red stripe on their back, are tiny, growing to a length of about 10 millimetre­s for females and less than half of that for males.

“We are seeing more of them around communal areas such as gardens and pools,” Dr Jaafir said. “If you think you have been bitten then you need to get yourself to a government hospital immediatel­y to receive the anti-venom.”

Redback spider bites tend to look like small pinpricks but they can be deadly.

“While we have not have had any deaths in the UAE from redback spider bites, they can still be extremely dangerous,” Dr Jaafir said.

“The problems arise when the venom gets into your system and causes chest and stomach pains. The advanced stages can cause a lot of sweating, high blood pressure and hallucinat­ions.”

Alan Dickson, who founded the Ridapest pest control company in Dubai in 1982, said he has encountere­d redbacks in Dubai, Hatta and Al Ain.

“I only once encountere­d redbacks indoors at an entrance to a kitchen in Jumeirah in the 1980s,” said Mr Dickson, from Scotland.

“However, they are very common outdoors, especially around buildings and places like car ports and garages. I had many around my house over my 19 years while living in the old Jebel Ali Village.

“I also came across them on pavements on Sheikh Zayed Road near the World Trade Centre.”

He said many people confused redback spiders with jumping spiders, which are common in villas in the UAE.

Tim Husband, technical director at Dubai Safari, agreed that redbacks were increasing in numbers.

“They are not native but the number of sightings is increasing,” Mr Husband said.

“They travel in people’s luggage from places such as Australia or South-East Asia or in imported goods such as fruit and packaging.”

He said the first thing that someone should do if they believe they have been bitten is not move around much, because activity increases bloodflow and spreads the venom through the body.

“You need to strap the area and limb with a firm bandage, call an ambulance and relax. You have plenty of time to get to the hospital,” Mr Husband said.

“It’s only the female that is poisonous and for an adult it is often not fatal, but it will make you very sick. Young children and pets are the most at risk.”

Nicola Forestiero, 37, from Manchester, said her dog Holli was bitten by a spider in 2015, when her family first moved to Dubai.

“It was horrific,” Ms Forestiero said. “We took the dog out for a walk in the sand and when we took her home she went to bite my husband as if she was in serious pain.

“Her leg was swelling up and we had to take her to the vets and they had to fight to save her life and her leg.

“The vet told us she had been bitten by a spider and her body was shutting down with the venom.”

 ??  ?? The redback spider is commonly found in Australia but sightings are on the rise in the UAE Alamy
The redback spider is commonly found in Australia but sightings are on the rise in the UAE Alamy

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