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. 2021 Mar 22;54:e0043-2021. doi: 10.1590/0037-8682-0043-2021

Injuries and infection caused by capybara bites in a human

André Luiz Rossetto 1, Lucas Franklin Amarante 1, Ana Letícia Rossetto 2, Vidal Haddad Junior 3
PMCID: PMC8008865  PMID: 33759913

Capybaras (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris - Linnaeus, 1766) are large rodents, living in groups 1 . When cornered or attacked, they defend themselves using their sharp teeth (Figure 1) 2 .

FIGURE 1: Capybaras in their natural habitat. These animals can settle in urban and peri-urban areas, increas the risk of contact with human beings. In detail, on the right: image of the incisors.

FIGURE 1:

A 25-year-old female from Balneário Camboriú (Santa Catarina State, Brazil) was bitten on the left thigh and scratched on the left lower leg while trying to rescue her dog from a capybara attack during a walk in a forested area (Figure 2). She was successfully rescued, but the dog died two days later.

FIGURE 2: Deep laceration on the left thigh of the victim, possibily caused by the incisor teeth of a capybara, and several scratches on left leg are visible.

FIGURE 2:

The victim underwent intensive wound cleaning and suturing; she received analgesia, amoxicillin and clavulanate 2g/day for 10 days, and tetanus and rabies vaccinations. She developed an abscess in the left thigh, which was drained. After 25 days, she had scars ranging between 1 and 8 cm. At the proximal part of the left thigh, there was an approximately2.5 cm ulcer in the process of resolution and a 4.0 cm scar in the distal part of the thigh (Figure 3). Wounds and infections caused by wild animals are becoming common today which highlights the need for microbiological studies of oral flora in wild animals and traumatic structures 3 .

FIGURE 3: Areas of trauma due to the bite and scratches immediately after initial care (left) after 14 days, showing dehiscence and secondary infection (center), and after 25 days with a partially healed lesion (right).

FIGURE 3:

Footnotes

Ethics: Clearance from the research ethics committees of the authors' affiliated institutions is not necessary for an isolated case report.

Financial Support: The authors declare that they have not received financial support of any kind.

REFERENCES

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