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Supply of Anti-venom Horse Plasmas There are as many as 2700 species of snakes in the entire world, but only about 375 poisonous ones. In subtropical Taiwan, snakes are found almost everywhere, particularly in the mountains and forests. There are 59 species, including 19 poisonous ones in sea and 12 on land in Taiwan. However, the six most commonly encountered by people and thus most dangerous poisonous snakes here on the island are: 1) Taiwan Cobra (Naja naja atra), 2) Pit Viper (Deinagkistrodon acutus), 3) Bamboo Viper (Trimeresurus stejnegeri), 4) Taiwan banded krait (Bungarus multicinctus), 5) Taiwan Habu (Trimeresurus mucrosquamatus), and 6) Russell’s Pit Viper (Daboia russellii formosensis). At Taiwan CDC, we are having a snake facility raising about 100 various poisonous snakes and arange with 45 horses for this very purpose at present. In the process of turning the anti-venom horse blood, the raw material, to make the anti-venom plasmas, the products, we first withdraw venom from a specific snake and get rid of its lethal component before immunization taking place or inoculate it into the horse. When the anti-serum potency in the horse has reached 60 Tanaka units (TU), we take out 5 to 9 liter blood per horse for the make of the product. The amount of withdrawn blood depends on the horse body weight. The following flow chart describes the individual steps we use to manufacture our anti-venom horse plasmas at Taiwan CDC: Raise poisonous snake (snake room) Take venom Mix with adjuvant Immunize horse Test blood Non-toxin (snake room) Verify titer Freeze-dried venom Make venom (凍結乾燥機) 0 1 separate plasma Partial withdraw blood Infuse N/S with horse RBC Make product and verify again Vaccine supply and sale 20 separate plasma (cold-storage room)