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not produce so deep a coma and often none at all. The patients generally feel drowsy and fall asleep, but are easily roused and sometimes awake spontaneously. There is also not the same amount of muscular paralysis. They are frequently able to walk a few steps with assistance and can move in bed, the arms especially being almost free from paresis But the insidious poison none the less does its work, . Mulberry UK Bags sale though its effects are less patent. It concentrates its action on the vaso-motor centre. The victims from hour to hour become more ansemic in appearance through increasing engorgement of the abdominal veins. Anaemia of the nerve-centres hastens the collapse, and from the combined effects of this and heart failure death takes place sudd. Mulberry Outlet site enly and quickly as if in a faint- ing fit. Here then we have an approach to the effects of viper poison which is also shown in the greater amount of swelling and effusion around the bite and in the bitten limb. This approach is still closer in the poison of the death adder (Acantophis antarctica). There is gener- ally much extra. Mulberry sale cheap mulberry handbags online asation of blood locally. Muscular paralysis is also less pronounced, but sudden collapse from vaso-motor paralysis not unfrequently takes place, when the patients fully conscious are still able to sit up. That leading feature of viper poison, diapedesis with haemorrhage, does not occur with either. SNAKE-POISON . Mulberry cross body handbags AND ITS ACTION. 39 If we turn from Australian to Indian snakes, the peculiar tendency of the j'ison to concentrate its action on special nerve-centres becomes still more marked. The predilection of the cobra poison for the respiratory centre has already been dwelt on. More remarkable and s. Mulberry hand handbags trangle is the action of the Indian viper-poison on the minute ganglia in the vaso-motor nerve ends, which control the capillary circulation, and by their paralysis bring about extensive haemorrhage through diapedesis. It is quite impossible for us with our present scanty knowledge to account for these peculiarities and irregularities in the action of a poison, which we know now to accomplish its destruction of animal life by one uniform design and principle of action. That the protean forms under which the poison-symptoms present themselves are one and all the result of reduc- tion and suspension of motor nerve currents may now be accepted as a well proven and fully established scientific fact. But why the effects of one and the sa