Not necessarily. With consistent training, preferably in conjunction and consultation with a professional trainer, there should be no further problems.
No. That sounds like an 'Old Wives' Tale'.
yes.whatever the dog treat taste like that is what it taste like to the human.
No, blood does not make your dog mean. That is an old wives tale. But why would you want to feed your dog raw food with blood in it? There are lots of bad parasites in blood from deer, rabbits, etc. Such as tapeworms, etc.
yes
taste it
blood cell width
Only if the dog was a good dog before it tasted blood. My sweet, kid loving Border Collie has tasted blood. I give her the extra steak after we eat.
A very spoiled dog, that is in the habit of receiving human food. If a dog never tastes human food, it won't have a taste for it. It's a simple matter of proper training.
Yes. Bigger veterinary hospitals routinely give dogs blood transfusions pretty much according to the same basics as for human patients. But you can't cross-transfuse, it's dog donors and dog recipients.
Blood is not considered good for most breeds of dogs. Yes many like the taste as it is in their instincts to eat meat and wildly they would eat raw meat. It is believed that tasting blood can make some breeds vicious.
There is no particular difference. The blood of each animal, including humans, will have some chemical differences from that of all other animals. The blood of a chimp is more like human blood than it is like dog blood and dog blood is more like human blood than it is like lizard or bird blood.
It would be better to talk to a vet to get the proper medication.Benadryl is designed for human use, and may be harmful to dog.
It is very unlikely for a human to contract disease from direct contact with canine blood.