Basically, you don't/can't. You have to let the body process it out all by itself. Or possibly assisted by anti-venom treatment administered by a doctor.
No, you get to a hospital to get treated with anti venom.
It depends - on whether the bite was just a 'warning strike' or a full-blown envenomation. If it was a 'proper' bite - then there is every likelihood that the snake injected enough venom to kill the wolf. Most rattlesnake venom is far more powerful than it actually needs to be.
NOTHING Actually, the term is "anti-venom", as in the stuff that prevents a rattlesnake bite from killing.
People used to suck out the venom through the bite. This wasn't always effective though. They could never get all the venom out. The venom would usually spread through the body not long afterwards.
The venom of a baby rattlesnake is the same as from an adult snake. However, an adult snake can control the amount of venom they inject and may not inject any venom during a bite (dry bite). They need the venom to obtain food and do not want to waist it to warn off a threat. When baby rattlesnakes bite they have not yet learned to control the flow of venom and will probably inject their entire supply and cause a more severe bite to the victim than an adult snake would.
They are equipped with fangs, and venom glands from birth ! Even newly-born babies have enough potency in their venom to deliver a lethal bite to humans.
Yes rattlesnakes use venom or poison to it's pray. First it goes through the venom glands to the teeth and then they bite and then the pray has venom in it.
Rattlesnakes are Venomous with two syringe-like fangs, they bite and inject the venom into their prey and then swallow them whole.
Rattle snake venom contain Hemotoxic elements, which damage tissue. Immense pain will quickly follow a rattlesnake bite, as the flesh around the bite quickly begins to destroy itself. There are other effects of rattlesnake venom, however those appear after a few minutes. A person will know right away that they have been bitten, just from the sheer pain it causes.
No part of a rattlesnake is poisonous. However, the venom glands, venom ducts and fangs are the venomous parts of the rattlesnake.
Rattlesnake Bite was created in 1985.
If a rattlesnake totally exhausts its venom supply it will take several weeks to fill its venom sacs again. This is why rattlesnakes do not want to use their venom in defense as it may leave them with an insufficient supply for obtaining food.