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  2. List of medically significant spider bites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_medically...

    A number of spiders can cause spider bites that are medically important. Almost all spiders produce venom but only a few are able to cause significant harm to humans. [1] Two medically important spider genera have a worldwide distribution—Latrodectus and Loxosceles. Others have a limited distribution.

  3. Spider bite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spider_bite

    Almost all spiders are venomous, but not all spider bites result in the injection of venom. Pain from non-venomous bites, so-called "dry bites", typically lasts for 5 to 60 minutes while pain from envenomating spider bites may last for longer than 24 hours. [9] Bleeding also may occur with a bite.

  4. Sicarius (spider) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sicarius_(spider)

    Sicarius is a genus of recluse spiders that is potentially medically significant to humans. It is one of three genera in its family, all venomous spiders known for a bite that can induce loxoscelism. They live in deserts and arid regions of the Neotropics, and females use a mixture of sand and silk when producing egg sacs. The name is Latin for ...

  5. List of venomous animals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_venomous_animals

    Strictly speaking, all spiders and scorpions possess venom, though only a handful are dangerous to humans. Spiders typically deliver their venom with a bite from piercing, fang-like chelicerae; scorpions sting their victims with a long, curved stinger mounted on the telson.

  6. Pathophysiology of spider bites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pathophysiology_of_spider...

    Spiders known to have necrotic venom occur most notoriously in the family Sicariidae, which includes both the recluse spiders and the six-eyed sand spiders in the genus Hexophthalma and Sicarius. Spiders in this family possess a known dermonecrotic agent sphingomyelinase D, [8] [9] which is otherwise found only in a few pathogenic bacteria.

  7. Recluse spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Recluse_spider

    The recluse spiders (Loxosceles (/ l ɒ k ˈ s ɒ s ɪ l iː z /), also known as brown spiders, fiddle-backs, violin spiders, and reapers, is a genus of spiders that was first described by R. T. Lowe in 1832. [4] They are venomous spiders known for their bite, which sometimes produces a characteristic set of symptoms known as loxoscelism.

  8. Chilean recluse spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chilean_recluse_spider

    The Chilean recluse spider, Loxosceles laeta, is a highly venomous spider of the family Sicariidae. In Spanish, it (and other South American recluse spiders) is known as araña de rincón, or "corner spider"; in Brazilian Portuguese, as aranha-marrom or "brown spider". It is considered by many to be the most dangerous of recluse spiders, and ...

  9. Spitting spider - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spitting_spider

    The fluid contains both venom and spider silk in liquid form, though it is produced in venom glands in the chelicerae. The venom-laced silk both immobilizes and envenoms prey such as silverfish . In high-speed footage the spiders can be observed swaying from side to side as they "spit", catching the prey in a criss-crossed "Z" pattern; it is ...