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This jellyfish's venom can save lives!

This jellyfish's venom can save lives!

Australia is known for its extremely dangerous animals. According to a report published by the Australian Bureau of Statistics, 266 people died from these animals from 2008 to 2017. In this case, a taxonomist from James Cook University in Queensland, northeast Australia, is extracting venom from these animals and sending it. to the lab to develop a cure. Then, “a small amount of this venom is injected into animals such as horses for six months, which produces natural antibodies,” Franceinfo notes. After that, scientists take plasma from the animals, extract the antibodies, purify them and transfer them. An anti-venom For humans. The medicine is then sent to hospitals to treat the bites of patients. During this time, Jamie Seymour saw the venom of the Irunganji jellyfish, whose sting is fatal to humans.

Cubomedusa, sea serpent, Blue ringed octopus… In his laboratory, a professor of taxonomy studies Sea animals Very poisonous. Recently, the media reports Franceinfo, the expert took the venom of a small Itanji jellyfish. To achieve this, he must remove the animal's tentacles, freeze-dry them, and collect the venom once it solidifies. By performing microscopic analyses, he discovered that the venom of this jellyfish could have an advantage: “It is a component that cures rheumatoid arthritis in mice within two or three weeks, (…)

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