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Emergency: requires immediate attention
Piranha bite
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed
Emergency: requires immediate attention

Piranha bite

Contributors: Vidal Haddad Jr, MD, MS, PhD, Lowell A. Goldsmith MD, MPH, Robert Norris MD, Joanne Feldman MD, MS
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Synopsis

The freshwater fish most frequently associated with bites in South America are piranhas. Despite the folklore surrounding these fish, there are few documented cases of piranha shoals (large schools) devouring large animals or humans (there are actually no reported cases of such attacks on living humans, only post-mortem). Piranhas are voracious carnivores and are attracted by the smell of blood in the water, but attacks by shoals on much larger animals are rare.

The most common scenario for piranha bites is a single bite by a single fish of a person bathing or swimming in an area of water formed by the damming of a river, or a distracted amateur or professional fisherman. The great majority of bites of piranhas are inflicted by male fish protecting the eggs, which are commonly deposited in the aquatic vegetation near the edges of the water pools.

Still more rarely, a patient may present with a bite injury from a pet piranha.

The bites are circular in shape, with tearing of the affected tissue.

Piranhas can be found in South American freshwaters from the Orinoco River Basin in Venezuela to the Paraná River in Argentina. Piranhas of the genus Serrasalmus can be found in all regions of Brazil.
  • The black piranha, Serrasalmus rhombeus, is an aggressive species and can reach up to 38 cm in length. It is found throughout the Amazon (although not in shoals) and remains in the river channels.
  • The most common species in the midwest and southeast regions of Brazil are Serrasalmus maculatus, Serrasalmus marginatus, and Serrasalmus spilopleura ("piranha catirina").
The rare attacks caused by schools of piranha are typically associated with the genus Pygocentrus, sometimes referred to as "true piranhas." The most common species, Pygocentrus nattereri (also known as piranha-caju, or "cashew piranha"), can be found in rivers in the northern region of Brazil, in the Amazon, and around dams in the Pantanal area. This is the species associated with rare undocumented reports of shoal attacks on live human beings.

Codes

ICD10CM:
W56.51XA – Bitten by other fish, initial encounter

SNOMEDCT:
242632007 – Piranha bite

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Last Updated:10/18/2017
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Emergency: requires immediate attention
Piranha bite
A medical illustration showing key findings of Piranha bite : Fish bite
Clinical image of Piranha bite - imageId=6827484. Click to open in gallery.  caption: 'A large erosion on the distal finger.'
A large erosion on the distal finger.
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