“…Locations include the leg, arm, and torso in most cases, and only 0.6-1.5% are on the face, neck, shoulder, buttocks, or genitalia [2]. The venom is hyaluronidase and cytotoxic sphingomyelinase-D venom mixture, promoting tissue penetration and necrosis with hemolysis, respectively, noting the "red, white, and blue sign" and risk for systemic involvement [1][2][3]. Through a complaint of a bite, geographical information, clinical manifestations, and laboratory evidence, the diagnosis is either putative, presumptive, probable, or documented [2].…”