Zürcher Nachrichten - Man who let snakes bite him 200 times spurs new antivenom hope

EUR -
AED 4.222696
AFN 80.486965
ALL 97.446677
AMD 441.850935
ANG 2.057735
AOA 1053.230329
ARS 1336.648769
AUD 1.771623
AWG 2.069667
AZN 1.954544
BAM 1.943176
BBD 2.320723
BDT 140.566801
BGN 1.957963
BHD 0.433504
BIF 3381.606407
BMD 1.149815
BND 1.472335
BOB 7.971215
BRL 6.317197
BSD 1.149333
BTN 99.074358
BWP 15.366173
BYN 3.761463
BYR 22536.377277
BZD 2.308701
CAD 1.571217
CDF 3308.018698
CHF 0.938692
CLF 0.028331
CLP 1087.172952
CNY 8.261446
CNH 8.266176
COP 4716.541816
CRC 578.839539
CUC 1.149815
CUP 30.470102
CVE 109.663623
CZK 24.830212
DJF 204.345413
DKK 7.458351
DOP 68.24097
DZD 149.387306
EGP 57.62862
ERN 17.247228
ETB 154.997969
FJD 2.585647
FKP 0.845594
GBP 0.855744
GEL 3.127536
GGP 0.845594
GHS 11.854333
GIP 0.845594
GMD 82.206209
GNF 9952.800069
GTQ 8.827651
GYD 240.37837
HKD 9.02594
HNL 30.067209
HRK 7.534966
HTG 150.422771
HUF 404.019787
IDR 18768.375484
ILS 4.035448
IMP 0.845594
INR 99.322586
IQD 1506.257869
IRR 48435.963629
ISK 143.600234
JEP 0.845594
JMD 182.931576
JOD 0.815188
JPY 166.853177
KES 148.904176
KGS 100.551274
KHR 4622.256968
KMF 493.271087
KPW 1034.839557
KRW 1579.495345
KWD 0.35236
KYD 0.957877
KZT 596.325938
LAK 24807.262732
LBP 103023.439052
LKR 345.674309
LRD 229.560808
LSL 20.719928
LTL 3.395105
LVL 0.695511
LYD 6.237744
MAD 10.49204
MDL 19.631463
MGA 5087.932409
MKD 61.54625
MMK 2413.40781
MNT 4119.175457
MOP 9.293247
MRU 45.670597
MUR 52.212478
MVR 17.712882
MWK 1996.079325
MXN 21.84228
MYR 4.884377
MZN 73.53067
NAD 20.719686
NGN 1774.55571
NIO 42.255473
NOK 11.415423
NPR 158.519172
NZD 1.907615
OMR 0.442101
PAB 1.149333
PEN 4.153702
PGK 4.738676
PHP 65.343421
PKR 325.713892
PLN 4.276852
PYG 9181.352873
QAR 4.185906
RON 5.032789
RSD 117.232892
RUB 90.259758
RWF 1638.486613
SAR 4.314001
SBD 9.605975
SCR 16.434012
SDG 690.463282
SEK 10.974875
SGD 1.477196
SHP 0.903574
SLE 25.842108
SLL 24111.053362
SOS 657.122519
SRD 44.669878
STD 23798.852494
SVC 10.056666
SYP 14949.778119
SZL 20.71992
THB 37.518536
TJS 11.38454
TMT 4.024353
TND 3.383335
TOP 2.692979
TRY 45.451641
TTD 7.803305
TWD 33.975307
TZS 3006.766701
UAH 47.75696
UGX 4132.155243
USD 1.149815
UYU 47.22362
UZS 14614.150906
VES 117.31484
VND 29998.102805
VUV 137.87927
WST 3.164037
XAF 651.723048
XAG 0.030933
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.107433
XDR 0.813219
XOF 652.518416
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.054229
ZAR 20.684686
ZMK 10349.711017
ZMW 27.981219
ZWL 370.240015
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

Man who let snakes bite him 200 times spurs new antivenom hope
Man who let snakes bite him 200 times spurs new antivenom hope / Photo: © CENTIVAX/AFP

Man who let snakes bite him 200 times spurs new antivenom hope

Tim Friede was feeling particularly down on the day after the September 11 attacks, so he went to his basement and let two of the world's deadliest snakes bite him.

Text size:

Four days later, he woke up from a coma.

"I know what it feels like to die from snakebite," Friede told AFP via video call from his home in the small US town of Two Rivers, Wisconsin.

This experience might put most people off snakes entirely, but Friede simply vowed to be more careful next time.

From 2000 to 2018, he allowed himself to be bitten by snakes more than 200 times. He also injected himself with their venom over 650 times.

Friede endured this pain because he wanted to achieve total immunity to venom, a practice called mithridatism which should not be tried at home.

After a couple of years, Friede started to believe he could be the basis for a better kind of antivenom. The former truck mechanic, who does not have a university degree, long struggled to be taken seriously by scientists.

But last month, a study published in the prestigious Cell journal showed that antibodies from his blood protect against a range of snake venom.

The researchers now hope Friede's hyper-immunity could even lead to the development of a universal antivenom.

This would fill a major need, because currently most antivenoms only cover one or a few of the world's 600 venomous snakes.

Up to 138,000 people are killed by snakebites a year, while 400,000 suffer amputations or other disabilities, according to the World Health Organization.

These figures are believed to be vastly underestimated because snakebite victims typically live in poorer, remote areas.

- 'Pain every time' -

Friede's first bite was from a harmless garter snake when he was five years old.

"I was afraid, I cried, I ran away," said Friede, now 57.

Then he started bringing snakes home and hiding them in pickle jars. His mother sought counselling, but his interest in snakes persisted.

Things escalated after Friede attended a class that taught him how to "milk" snakes for their venom.

How antivenom is made has changed little over the last 125 years.

Small doses of snake venom are injected into animals such as horses, which produce antibodies that can be extracted and used as antivenom.

However this antivenom usually only works for bites from that particular species of snake -- and it includes other antibodies from horse that can cause serious side-effects including anaphylactic shock.

"I thought, well, if they make antivenom in horses, why can't I just use myself as a primate?" Friede said.

He started working through the venom from all the deadly species he could get his hands on, such as cobras, taipans, black mambas and rattlesnakes.

"There is pain every time," he said.

- 'Proud' -

For years, the scientists he contacted to take advantage of his immunity refused to bite.

Then in 2017, immunologist Jacob Glanville, who previously worked on universal vaccines, turned his attention towards antivenom.

Glanville told AFP he had been looking for "a clumsy snake researcher who'd been bit accidentally a couple times," when he came across a video of Friede taking brutal back-to-back snake bites.

When they first spoke, Glanville said he told Friede: "I know this is awkward, but I would love to get my hands on some of your blood."

"I've been waiting for this call for a long time," came the response, Glanville said.

The antivenom described in the Cell paper includes two antibodies from Friede's blood, as well as a drug called varespladib.

It offered mice full protection against 13 of the 19 snake species tested, and partial protection for the remaining six.

The researchers hope a future cocktail will cover far more snakes -- particularly vipers -- with further trials planned on dogs in Australia.

Timothy Jackson of the Australian Venom Research Unit praised the immunological research, but questioned whether a human needed to be involved, pointing to synthetically developed antibodies.

Glanville said the ultimate goal of his US-based firm Centivax was to develop a universal antivenom administered by something like an EpiPen, potentially produced in India to keep the costs down.

Friede said he was "proud" to have made a "small difference" in medical history.

Now working for Centivax, Friede stopped self-inflicting himself with venom in 2018 to save the firm from liability issues.

But he hopes to get bitten by snakes again in the future.

"I do miss it," he said.

P.E.Steiner--NZN