This is a question of curiousity, I see...
Well there is no definitive answer to this, but first let me answer your question on vomit.... No... Salt can kill you but not in that way. Salt is absorbed into your blood stream however if there is too much salt it lowers the concentration of water in your blood. Now water diffuses across a membrane to areas of higher to lower concentration. The water in cells will diffuse into th blood an you will eventually spill all the water out in your ruin (water is filtered from blood in kidneys). This can make you very. Very. VERY dehydrated. The lower volume of blood can lead to hypovolemic shock.
Salt can also kill you in the long run by exacerbating or causing hypertension.
Answer: B: Contact between infected saliva and an open wound.
Explanation: It gets in your blood stream. For example, sharing needles.
<h3>Porque o ponto - socorro é de graça e já o medico nem sempre esta disponivel e tem que marcar consulta e a maioria ja deixa pro ultimo caso</h3>
For this question, think about what impulsive means.
Impulsive means to act without thinking. Usually when you act without thinking, things can go wrong but rarely it might turn out to be good.
Think about a time you said something mean to someone or when you saw someone get hurt, you immediately ran to help them. These events cause very impulsive actions and are very common.
Lets take the example of when you decided to say something mean to someone else. Why would you or somebody else decide this impulsively? Maybe its because you don't like that person or that person was bullying one of your friends. That causes us to act impulsively because we feel hatred or because we don't like seeing people we love get hurt.
What usually happens when you say something mean to someone? Its either the person you said the mean thing to acts also impulsively and says something mean back. Or the person feels sad.
Saying something mean to someone causes bad effects and naturally we regret it.
Sorry this took so long but I hope this helps! :)
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Although human beings can be attacked by many kinds of animals, man-eaters are those that have incorporated human flesh into their usual diet and actively hunt and kill humans. Most reported cases of man-eaters have involved lions, tigers, leopards, polar bears, and large crocodilians.