October 2025

Brown Recluse Envenomation

Background

The brown recluse spider (Loxosceles reclusa) is one of two medically significant spiders in North America along with the black widow. While several Loxosceles species are present in the United States, L. reclusa has the widest distribution, spanning 16 states from southeastern Nebraska to southwest Ohio and south through Texas to northern Georgia. In nature, these spiders inhabit woodpiles, tree bark, and rocky debris; indoors they are typically found in garages, basements, and other undisturbed areas. Their webs are asymmetrical and lined with dense, white silk. Brown recluses are nocturnal hunters capable of surviving up to six months without food or water. Although generally non-aggressive, they bite when provoked, with females exhibiting greater defensive behavior. Most envenomations occur between spring and autumn, often in the morning (Repplinger, D.J. & Hahn, I., 2019).


Identification

The brown recluse is also known as the “violin” or “fiddleback” spider, due to the dark violin-shaped marking on the dorsal cephalothorax. However, this feature is variable and not diagnostic, as similar markings occur in other species (e.g., cellar spiders, pirate spiders). A more reliable identifying feature is the unique eye pattern: six eyes arranged in three dyads in a semicircle, unlike the typical eight seen in most spiders (Repplinger, D.J. & Hahn, I., 2019).


Pathophysiology and Clinical Presentation

Brown recluse venom is cytotoxic, composed primarily of sphingomyelinase D and hyaluronidase. Sphingomyelinase D induces dermonecrosis, hemolysis, and serotonin release from platelets, while also activating inflammatory cascades involving prostaglandins, leukotrienes, neutrophils, and thromboxane. Hyaluronidase facilitates venom spread but does not directly cause tissue injury (White, J., 2017). The ratio of venom to spreading factor influences lesion severity. Clinically, most bites result in localized erythema, pruritus, and mild induration that resolve within weeks. Larger inocula can produce blistering, ulceration, and necrosis with eschar formation, often requiring 2–4 months for healing. Rarely, systemic loxoscelism develops 24–72 hours post-bite, presenting with chills, malaise, vomiting, arthralgias, jaundice, hemolytic anemia, and/or acute renal failure, independent of cutaneous severity. The incidence varies by region and Loxosceles species involved.



Treatment

Loxosceles envenomations are variable, and no U.S. approved antivenom is available (Swanson, D. L. & Vetter, R. S., 2005). Laboratory testing cannot confirm envenomation, though findings such as hemolysis and anemia may support diagnosis. Management is supportive, focusing on local wound care, prevention of secondary infection, symptomatic relief, and the treatment of systemic complications.

NOT RECLUSE mnemonic


(Note that these are contrary criteria: Any one being true indicates that the injury is likely NOT a brown recluse bite)

(Evans, J., 2017)


Numerous: More than one wound

Occurrence: Injury occurred outside of the spider’s geographical territory or not in an enclosed space like a box, closet, or attic

Timing: The wound arose sometime between November and March


Red center: The center of the wound is red

Elevated: The middle of the wound is elevated, not sunken

Chronic: The wound has persisted for more than three months

Large: The wound is more than 10cm (4in) wide

Ulceration: The wound gets crusty within the first week

Swollen: The wound swells up if positioned below the neck

Exudative: The wound is “wet” - oozing pus or clear fluid


Written by: Terri Reisinger, PharmD 2026 candidate

Reviewed by: Dr. Goertemoeller, Dr. Hays, Dr. Pancioli, Dr. Yin

Edited by: Julia Conroy, MAEd, MCHES

For questions or to submit topic ideas contact:



OhioPoisonCenters@cchmc.org

OhioPoisonCenters.org

Subscribe to Poison Pearls




Email  Web