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Human Bites

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  • A human bite wound to the hand sustained by punching someone in the mouth often becomes infected.
  • Wounds should be cleaned, and antibiotics should be given.

Because human teeth are not particularly sharp, most human bites cause a bruise and only a shallow tear (laceration), if any. Exceptions are on fleshy appendages, such as the ears, nose, and penis, which may be severed. The clenched-fist injury, or fight bite, which occurs on the knuckles of a person who punches another person in the mouth, is likely to become infected (see Hand Disorders: Infections Caused By Bites). Hospitalization may be needed for administration of intravenous antibiotics. A clenched-fist cut frequently involves the finger tendon that passes over the knuckle. Sometimes the biting person transmits diseases, such as hepatitis. Transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) is extremely unlikely because the concentration of the virus in saliva is lower than that in blood and because substances in saliva inhibit the virus's activity.

Symptoms

Bites are painful and usually produce a mark on the skin with the pattern of the teeth. Fight bites leave only a small, straight cut over a knuckle. A lacerated finger tendon often results in difficulty moving the finger in one direction. Infected bites become very painful, red, and swollen.

Did You Know...
  • Transmission of HIV infection with a human bite wound is highly unlikely.

Treatment

Human bites are cleaned by flooding the wound with sterile salt water (saline) and cleansing it with soap and water. Severed parts can sometimes be reattached. Tears, except those involving the hand and those that have occurred many hours ago, are surgically closed. All people with human bites that have broken the skin are given antibiotics by mouth to prevent infection. Infected bites are treated with antibiotics and often must be opened surgically to examine and clean the wound. If the biting person is known or suspected to have a disease that may be spread by biting, preventive treatment may be necessary.

Last full review/revision February 2009 by Robert A. Barish, MD, MBA

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