It depends what kind. Some does, some does not! =]
Not a human's skin but the dog itself. A dog's saliva contain lysozymes which help damage bacterial cell walls.
No. It is not humanly possible to fry a human being's skin. And if it was possible, it would hurt terribly.
the skin of snail !!
a snail has abreathing hole on the side of its body, the slugs also have the same thing
Yes, chlorine can hurt a dogs skin. Full strength would be harmful, but the diluted clorine in a swimming pool wouldn't. A dog's skin isn't that much different than a human's.
to hurt by squeezing your skin is pinch
saliva scrotum small intestine spinal cord sperm spongy bone spin skin stomach
absolutely yes!.. based in a research that dog saliva have a nutrient that help skin to cure damage skin..
oven cleaners,soap,cleaning fluids,creams for skin,human saliva,milk,cleaning detergents and swimming pools. oven cleaners,soap,cleaning fluids,creams for skin,human saliva,milk,cleaning detergents and swimming pools.
It does seem that dogs do, doesn't it? While I don't know for sure, I can say that the cooling systems for dogs use saliva as a major component. Dogs can't cool themselves through their skin as we do; they cool themselves by allowing saliva to evaporate off their tongues. A skill that dogs have perfected.
No. HPV is transmitted by skin to skin contact through vaginal, anal and oral sex with a partner who already has HPV.
yeah