If your skin were to be stung by a wasp, the stinger would be pulled out of the wasp, and into your skin, which has poison in it, which would mean, poison would be injected into your body.
A wasp causes a wasp sting
Well, wasp sting is more poisonous than bee sting
A wasp sting will not effect breastfeeding. A wasp sting will only effect the area of the body around the sting. Breastfeeding is safe to continue after a wasp sting. Breast milk has the ability to heal the sting and other skin irritations by applying a small amount of the milk to the irritated area.
The self-defensive sinking of a stinger, with the resulting death of the bee, not the wasp, into skin defines a bee or a wasp sting.
A wasp will sting when it feels threatened or scared.
the wasp sting is full of venom which is alkaline
The nature of the bee and wasp sting is that they are usually inflammatory and acidic.
No. coughing after a wasp sting is a sign of anaphylaxis
A wasp sting is a base because it is alkali.
They sting people.
Probably neither. The stinging hairs on the nettle would not be strong enough to penetrate the wasp's exoskeleton, and the wasp would have no reason to sting the nettle.
A little sodium bicarbonate could well act as a soothing agent, but contrary to popular belief you can't neutralise either a wasp or bee sting by putting any chemicals on the surface of the skin.