So it has 2 ways of acting.
1. Injection, this happens using either a bite (least effective injecting) and their stingers (Most effective). When it is injected it goes through the blood flow and begins attacking vital organs, first it starts with the nerve system, causing paralysis, victim becomes unable to move and are in a lot of pain during this as well but has no means to say so as it *then* goes for the lungs, causing breathing to be harder and harder until they can’t breathe unless given oxygen by medical means (such as a machine with the tube shoved down the windpipe to keep oxygen flowing by force). If they haven’t succumbed to suffocation, the toxin attacks the heart last from it traveling through the blood flow, stopping it in its tracks and causing a heart attack more or less.
2. External exposure, this one acts slower. This is caused by the toxin getting in contact with the skin. If it hits the eyes it causes blindness. It takes about 5 minutes for the paralysis to begin, starting from where the contact happened and moving down & up the body, it takes 35 minutes for said paralysis to be fully set. This isn’t *as* lethal as it takes longer for it to reach anything vital unless it was ingested. Most victims can survive this if given medical treatment. And if one acts fast enough to remove a majority of said liquid *off* their body, the effects will be minimized and often just leave behind an uncomfortable, stinging sensation that lasts a couple days while the body fights it off. Doing it *that* way can help a person develop an immunity to this
1. Injection, this happens using either a bite (least effective injecting) and their stingers (Most effective). When it is injected it goes through the blood flow and begins attacking vital organs, first it starts with the nerve system, causing paralysis, victim becomes unable to move and are in a lot of pain during this as well but has no means to say so as it *then* goes for the lungs, causing breathing to be harder and harder until they can’t breathe unless given oxygen by medical means (such as a machine with the tube shoved down the windpipe to keep oxygen flowing by force). If they haven’t succumbed to suffocation, the toxin attacks the heart last from it traveling through the blood flow, stopping it in its tracks and causing a heart attack more or less.
2. External exposure, this one acts slower. This is caused by the toxin getting in contact with the skin. If it hits the eyes it causes blindness. It takes about 5 minutes for the paralysis to begin, starting from where the contact happened and moving down & up the body, it takes 35 minutes for said paralysis to be fully set. This isn’t *as* lethal as it takes longer for it to reach anything vital unless it was ingested. Most victims can survive this if given medical treatment. And if one acts fast enough to remove a majority of said liquid *off* their body, the effects will be minimized and often just leave behind an uncomfortable, stinging sensation that lasts a couple days while the body fights it off. Doing it *that* way can help a person develop an immunity to this
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