LONDON: For nearly 30 years, London-based reptile enthusiast and musician Steve Ludwin has been injecting snake venom - a practice that has almost killed him.

It may now help save thousands of lives, as researchers search for a new antidote based on his body's response to the toxic fluids.



"It sounds very crazy what I am doing but it turns out that it potentially has lots of health benefits," Mr Ludwin, the tattooed 51-year-old told AFP in the living room of his home in the British capital.

Mr Ludwin demonstrated his decades-old habit by firmly holding the head of a green Pope's tree viper - Trimeresurus popeiorum - and extracting a few drops of its venom.

Minutes later, he has injected the fluid into his arm using a syringe.

Steve Ludwin points to the spot on his arm where he injects himself with snake venom, as he poses with a Honduran milk snake outside his apartment in Kennington, south London on Nov 9. (Photo: AFP / Niklas Halle'n)



Over the years Mr Ludwin has injected the venom of some of the world's most dangerous snakes, including the black mamba and cobras.

He claimed that it has strengthened his immune system so much he has not suffered from a cold in 15 years.

But it has not been all positive.

"I have had quite a few accidents", Mr Ludwin said, recalling he once ended up in a London hospital's intensive care unit for three days following an overdose.

"It's a very very dangerous thing to do, I don't encourage people to do it".

"The sensation of injecting snake venom is not pleasant at all ... it's not like a Jim Morrison trip. You don't trip - it's extreme pain", said Mr Ludwin, who wears a snake pendant.

Steve Ludwin extracts the venom from a Pope's Pit Viper at his apartment in Kennington, south London on Nov 9. (Photo: AFP / Niklas Halle'n)

Mr Ludwin's unique behaviour is the subject of a short film at a new exhibition on venom opening at London's Natural History Museum on Friday.

His habit has taken on new meaning in recent years after a team of researchers at the University of Copenhagen embarked on producing an anti-venom using his antibodies.

"When he injects venom, his immune system responds," Dr Brian Lohse, a professor at the faculty of health and medical sciences at the University of Copenhagen, said in a phone interview.

"What we expect is to find copies of his antibodies, isolate them, test them, and eventually set up a production of them."

Four full-time researchers, who began work in 2013, expect to complete the project within a year.

CHEAPER ANTIDOTES

If successful, it would be the first human-derived anti-venom made from a donor who has injected himself with different snake venoms.

Antidotes to date have been harnessed by collecting antibodies from animals, usually horses, that have been given venom.

"Today's animal-derived antibodies are quite expensive in hospital settings," said Dr Lohse, noting the average price for a treatment is typically £1,500 to £2,300 (S$2376 to S$4116), but can top £11,700 in extreme cases.

"Our anti-venoms are aimed to cost a hundred dollars and we hope to make it freely available in countries where people are bitten every day and people die every day," he added.

Dr Lohse said he hopes to distribute the new anti-venom free of charge with the support of governments or non-profit organisations.

According to the World Health Organisation, snake bites are a "neglected" public health issue.

It estimates around 5.4 million people worldwide are bitten by snakes every year, and between 81,000 and 138,000 die.

Although Dr Lohse values the indispensable part Mr Ludwin has played in the venture, he has reservations about his habit.

"Science, and perhaps future snake bite victims, can express their gratitude towards Steve's endeavours, but on the other side it's very dangerous to do self-immunisation," he said.

"Steve has been in serious danger several times, therefore I would strongly discourage anybody to do what Steve has done."