GBAHOO! ANSWERS

James_

aka Underscore_ or 'that Meowstic guy'
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Babies can shitting and play with that Poop without Consequences.:D

The Question is,why are old People no longer allowed to do this? :unsure:
I mean, they can if they want to


Why did the chicken cross the road?
 
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Alexander1970

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If FAST6191 gets injured/bitten by a venomous animal... what will he do?

Writing an scientific Treatise....


Animal poison

Aspivenin, a vacuum pump for suctioning snake or insect venom.
Droplets of poison on the stinger of a hymenoptera
Snail shell of a map cone (Conus geographus), a fish-eating cone snail that Contulakin-G (Conantokin) synthesizes, a potent conotoxin.

Animal poisons or animal poisons are toxins from animals, ie those poisons that are synthesized or sequestered by animals (enriched from other sources). [1] Animal poisons can be used to overcome prey or to ward off microorganisms, parasites or predators.

Some of the animals contain toxins in parts of the body which are passively transmitted in contact (poisonous), for example by touching or ingesting them as food; others can actively transmit their toxins (venomous), such as by bite (poison tooth) or sting (poison sting). [1]
contents

1 ingredients
2 Biological effects
3 poison animals
3.1 Poisonous animals in Germany
3.2 Poisonous animals in the USA
4 treatment options
4.1 Acute poisoning
4.2 Allergization
5 literature
6 individual records

ingredients

Many poisons are a complex mixture of different organic chemical substance classes. The main active ingredients of actively released insecticides are peptides and proteins. They also contain alkaloids, terpenes, polysaccharides, biogenic amines (such as histamines), organic acids (such as formic acid), and amino acids. [2] [3] [4]
Severe necrosis on the lower leg of an eleven-year-old boy who was bitten by Terciopelo lance viper (Bothrops asper) in Ecuador. The picture was taken two weeks after the bite; the boy had previously been treated with antibiotics (unsuitable for poison bites).
Biological effects

Due to the large number of poisons, there are a large number of mechanisms of action. The spectrum of action is extensive, but can be roughly divided into neurotoxic, hemolytic, digestive, hemorrhagic and algogenic (pain-causing) effects for actively released insecticides. [5] [6] Nerve toxins may dominate among the particularly potent poisons. Others change the tertiary structure of proteins and thus their functions as chaperones. [7]
Poisonous animals

Within the animals there are several poisonous animals among the taxa of the sponges (Porifera), flower animals (Anthozoa), hydrozoen, umbrella jellyfish (Scyphozoa), multi-bristles (Polychaeta), snails (Gastropoda), cephalopods (Cephalopoda), insects (insect venom), arachnids (Arachnida), fish (poisonous fish), amphibians (amphibian poisons, particularly known as poison dart frogs), reptiles and mammals (mammals, poisonous mammals). [1] Few poisonous birds such as the Spur-winged Goose (Plectropterus gambensis) are known among the birds. In the 1990s, it was found that the skin and feathers of the two-color pitohuis (Pitohui dichrous) living in New Guinea contained batrachotoxin. [8] Pitohui ferrugineus and Mohrenpitohui (Pitohui nigrescens) and the blue-cap flute (Ifrita kowaldi) from New Guinea also carry the poison in their feathers. [8]
Poisonous animals in Germany

In Germany, poisonous animals can be hazardous to human health:

Jellyfish
in the North and Baltic Seas such as yellow hair jellyfish and fire jellyfish
Arachnids
Garden spider, thorn finger spider, wasp spider;
insects
many hymenoptera such as bees, wasps, bumblebees;
Amphibians
Fire salamander, red-bellied toad, yellow-bellied toad;
Reptiles
Aspis viper, adder.

Many others, such as scale ants, ladybirds or Colorado beetles, contain toxins that are generally not harmful to human health.
Poisonous animals in USA

In the United States, poisonous animals occur: venomous snakes, scaly reptiles (Gila crustaceans), toads, spiders, scorpions, centipedes, millipedes, insect caterpillars, skin-winged animals. On the sea coast also jellyfish, stingrays, cottoidea, cnidarians, sponges, ringworms, echinoderms, molluscs and others. [9]

Treatment options

The antidote is a (material) antidote to toxins or other substances that affect an organism.
Acute poisoning

Untreated acute tissue poisoning from potent animal toxins (such as poison fish, scorpion bites or snake bites) can cause permanent damage and be life-threatening. If possible, a specific antiserum is used for effective treatment. It is a passive vaccination with an immune serum that contains antibodies against the toxins. These toxins are obtained from poison animals bred for this purpose (e.g. in snake farms). The poison obtained is usually frozen and freeze-dried for better storage. With high dilution, pets - often horses, sheep or rabbits - are vaccinated. Purified parts of your blood serum make up the antiserum. For maximum durability, this is freeze-dried and melted into portions in crushed glass ampoules. If the antiserum is administered soon after poisoning occurs and the antiserum is specifically effective, the prognosis is generally good.
Allergy

With the same dose of poison, there is sometimes a different effect on different people. This can often be attributed to different levels of allergy and is referred to as allergy. [10] Especially after stings by honeybees (Apis mellifera), wasps (especially Vespula vulgaris, Vespula germanica), more rarely also hornets (Vespa crabro) and bumblebees (Bombus spp.), Insect venom allergies can occur, the reaction range can vary from 'harmless' to anaphylactic Stretch shock. In an emergency, electrolyte solutions can be administered intravenously or adrenaline injected in particularly severe cases.

For the treatment of poison allergies, especially against skin flies, the triggering insecticides can be administered in low doses, this is called hyposensitization. [11] [12]
literature

Philipp Teichfischer: Animal poisons as a remedy - a contribution to the history of ancient medicine. In: Medizinhistorisches Journal, 50, 2015, 4, pp. 319–356.
Anders Edstrom: Venomous and poisonous animals. Krieger Publishing Company, 1992
Wolfgang Bücherl, Eleanor E. Buckley, Venancio Deulofeu (ed.): Venomous Animals and Their Venoms: Venomous Vertebrates. Vol. 1, Elsevier, September 17, 2013
Gerhard Venzmer: Toxic animals and animal poisons. Stuttgart 1932.
Julian White, Jurg Meier: Handbook of clinical toxicology of animal venoms and poisons. Vol. 236, CRC Press, 1995

 

AmandaRose

Do what I do. Hold tight and pretend it’s a plan
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Writing an scientific Treatise....


Animal poison

Aspivenin, a vacuum pump for suctioning snake or insect venom.
Droplets of poison on the stinger of a hymenoptera
Snail shell of a map cone (Conus geographus), a fish-eating cone snail that Contulakin-G (Conantokin) synthesizes, a potent conotoxin.

Animal poisons or animal poisons are toxins from animals, ie those poisons that are synthesized or sequestered by animals (enriched from other sources). [1] Animal poisons can be used to overcome prey or to ward off microorganisms, parasites or predators.

Some of the animals contain toxins in parts of the body which are passively transmitted in contact (poisonous), for example by touching or ingesting them as food; others can actively transmit their toxins (venomous), such as by bite (poison tooth) or sting (poison sting). [1]
contents

1 ingredients
2 Biological effects
3 poison animals
3.1 Poisonous animals in Germany
3.2 Poisonous animals in the USA
4 treatment options
4.1 Acute poisoning
4.2 Allergization
5 literature
6 individual records

ingredients

Many poisons are a complex mixture of different organic chemical substance classes. The main active ingredients of actively released insecticides are peptides and proteins. They also contain alkaloids, terpenes, polysaccharides, biogenic amines (such as histamines), organic acids (such as formic acid), and amino acids. [2] [3] [4]
Severe necrosis on the lower leg of an eleven-year-old boy who was bitten by Terciopelo lance viper (Bothrops asper) in Ecuador. The picture was taken two weeks after the bite; the boy had previously been treated with antibiotics (unsuitable for poison bites).
Biological effects

Due to the large number of poisons, there are a large number of mechanisms of action. The spectrum of action is extensive, but can be roughly divided into neurotoxic, hemolytic, digestive, hemorrhagic and algogenic (pain-causing) effects for actively released insecticides. [5] [6] Nerve toxins may dominate among the particularly potent poisons. Others change the tertiary structure of proteins and thus their functions as chaperones. [7]
Poisonous animals

Within the animals there are several poisonous animals among the taxa of the sponges (Porifera), flower animals (Anthozoa), hydrozoen, umbrella jellyfish (Scyphozoa), multi-bristles (Polychaeta), snails (Gastropoda), cephalopods (Cephalopoda), insects (insect venom), arachnids (Arachnida), fish (poisonous fish), amphibians (amphibian poisons, particularly known as poison dart frogs), reptiles and mammals (mammals, poisonous mammals). [1] Few poisonous birds such as the Spur-winged Goose (Plectropterus gambensis) are known among the birds. In the 1990s, it was found that the skin and feathers of the two-color pitohuis (Pitohui dichrous) living in New Guinea contained batrachotoxin. [8] Pitohui ferrugineus and Mohrenpitohui (Pitohui nigrescens) and the blue-cap flute (Ifrita kowaldi) from New Guinea also carry the poison in their feathers. [8]
Poisonous animals in Germany

In Germany, poisonous animals can be hazardous to human health:

Jellyfish
in the North and Baltic Seas such as yellow hair jellyfish and fire jellyfish
Arachnids
Garden spider, thorn finger spider, wasp spider;
insects
many hymenoptera such as bees, wasps, bumblebees;
Amphibians
Fire salamander, red-bellied toad, yellow-bellied toad;
Reptiles
Aspis viper, adder.

Many others, such as scale ants, ladybirds or Colorado beetles, contain toxins that are generally not harmful to human health.
Poisonous animals in USA

In the United States, poisonous animals occur: venomous snakes, scaly reptiles (Gila crustaceans), toads, spiders, scorpions, centipedes, millipedes, insect caterpillars, skin-winged animals. On the sea coast also jellyfish, stingrays, cottoidea, cnidarians, sponges, ringworms, echinoderms, molluscs and others. [9]

Treatment options

The antidote is a (material) antidote to toxins or other substances that affect an organism.
Acute poisoning

Untreated acute tissue poisoning from potent animal toxins (such as poison fish, scorpion bites or snake bites) can cause permanent damage and be life-threatening. If possible, a specific antiserum is used for effective treatment. It is a passive vaccination with an immune serum that contains antibodies against the toxins. These toxins are obtained from poison animals bred for this purpose (e.g. in snake farms). The poison obtained is usually frozen and freeze-dried for better storage. With high dilution, pets - often horses, sheep or rabbits - are vaccinated. Purified parts of your blood serum make up the antiserum. For maximum durability, this is freeze-dried and melted into portions in crushed glass ampoules. If the antiserum is administered soon after poisoning occurs and the antiserum is specifically effective, the prognosis is generally good.
Allergy

With the same dose of poison, there is sometimes a different effect on different people. This can often be attributed to different levels of allergy and is referred to as allergy. [10] Especially after stings by honeybees (Apis mellifera), wasps (especially Vespula vulgaris, Vespula germanica), more rarely also hornets (Vespa crabro) and bumblebees (Bombus spp.), Insect venom allergies can occur, the reaction range can vary from 'harmless' to anaphylactic Stretch shock. In an emergency, electrolyte solutions can be administered intravenously or adrenaline injected in particularly severe cases.

For the treatment of poison allergies, especially against skin flies, the triggering insecticides can be administered in low doses, this is called hyposensitization. [11] [12]
literature

Philipp Teichfischer: Animal poisons as a remedy - a contribution to the history of ancient medicine. In: Medizinhistorisches Journal, 50, 2015, 4, pp. 319–356.
Anders Edstrom: Venomous and poisonous animals. Krieger Publishing Company, 1992
Wolfgang Bücherl, Eleanor E. Buckley, Venancio Deulofeu (ed.): Venomous Animals and Their Venoms: Venomous Vertebrates. Vol. 1, Elsevier, September 17, 2013
Gerhard Venzmer: Toxic animals and animal poisons. Stuttgart 1932.
Julian White, Jurg Meier: Handbook of clinical toxicology of animal venoms and poisons. Vol. 236, CRC Press, 1995

Shut up @FAST6191 stop making us all look stupid. No wait its @alexander1970 when did you become smart? :rofl2:
 

AmandaRose

Do what I do. Hold tight and pretend it’s a plan
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Please leave fast69 alone. There isn’t a more knowledgeable or thorough user. He will drown you with knowledge!
And there is the problem we are all dumb fucks and his posts makes us feel even more dumb than we actually are.
 

Alexander1970

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And there is the problem we are all dumb fucks and his posts makes us feel even more dumb than we actually are.
please noooo...............

tenor.gif
 

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