Display title | Universal Poison |
Default sort key | Universal Poison |
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Date of page creation | 21:27, 1 November 2013 |
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Article description: (description ) This attribute controls the content of the description and og:description elements. | In Real Life, there are many types of poisons. Variations exist that will affect nearly any organ or system. Poisoning can manifest itself as nearly any symptom known to man. Different individuals and (especially) species are not affected by poison in the same way; chocolate and caffeine are toxic to dogs and cats, but relatively harmless to most humans. Capsaicin can seriously irritate human skin and mucous membranes, but is completely unnoticeable to birds. The dosage is also important, if you care whether the victim gets mildly nauseated or dies quickly. As Paracelsus pointed out, even life-sustaining substances become toxic in excessive amounts. Essentially, poison can be any substance that a particular body can't deal with at that particular dosage. |