• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    1121 month ago

    The bite actually doesn’t kill you, it just shuts down your nervous system so you can’t breath.

    I feel that’s like saying “getting mauled by a bear doesn’t kill you, it just causes major lacerations so all your blood leaks out”. Technically sure, but it seems like a bit of a pedantic distinction…

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      581 month ago

      Reminds me of people who insisted COVID didn’t kill anyone because it was the symptoms that actually killed people

    • @SacralPlexus
      link
      English
      331 month ago

      You’re not totally wrong but some things are not so easily treated as with rescue breathing. This is the same problem with any paralytic agent (e.g. botulism) is that the mechanism of death is suffocation since you can’t breathe. But from a rescue standpoint its really easy to breathe for someone whereas its not easy to stop multiple lacerations leading to exanguination and I think that is the point they were making is that this could be a survivable event if a rescuer is nearby.

    • @toynbee
      link
      English
      191 month ago

      I was thinking “it’s not the fall that kills you, it’s the sudden stop at the end.”

      • @General_Effort
        link
        English
        141 month ago

        It’s not the sudden stop at the end that kills you. It’s the different times at which parts of you stop.

        • @General_Effort
          link
          English
          530 days ago

          It’s not the different times at which parts of you stop that kills you. It’s the different places they are in when they do.

          (C’mon, y’all. Help me out. I’m trying to start a thing here!)

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            429 days ago

            It’s not the different places and times your body parts stop that kill you. It is the inflexibility of your connecting body parts inbetween?

            • @General_Effort
              link
              English
              329 days ago

              It’s not the inflexibility of your connecting body parts that kills you. It’s the insufficient tensile strength of the connecting tissue!

    • @bisby
      link
      English
      151 month ago

      Getting bit by a venomous snake in Australia and you’re blood starts to disassemble itself. The only counter is antivenom or die. Your blood breaking down is what kills you. And there is no way to separate the bite from that.

      Being able to counter the venom in such a simple way is what makes it different. You can logically break it down into steps that are separable.

        • @bisby
          link
          English
          81 month ago

          Correct.

          For the hemotoxin, you aren’t going to “just wait for the effects to wear off.” The toxin will kill you.

          For the neurotoxin, you can just wait out the effects by countering the symptoms. Can’t breathe? Respirator can save your life.

          The hemotoxin itself is doing terrible damage, but the neurotoxin itself doesn’t do any “damage” other than disabling systems.

          • @[email protected]
            link
            fedilink
            English
            5
            edit-2
            1 month ago

            Yeah that’s mostly true… But it’s not like a hangover… I had a friend bitten by a snake out in the Mojave once and I’m sure she would have strong opinions about how strenuous the recovery was from it. Neurotoxins, especially potent ones, can be disruptive enough to create long term disabilities. If you are someone who performs a lot of skilled fine motor movements as part of your job or as part of a hobby or something it could be a significant amount of time for you to fully recover from a neurotoxin.

            Cytotoxins are interesting as well, though generally not considered deadly they can really mess up your quality of life and be extremely debilitating, even disfiguring.

            Generally just a good idea to stay away from anything venomous.