No. While a dog's saliva may contain less bacteria than a human's, it still contains bacteria, and it certainly does not have any magical curative properties.
dogs cannot spit becasue they do not have the same saliva glands that we have they have ones called saliva utocus which make green saliva if the dog is ill
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.
Guinea Pigs don't have the same saliva as dogs.
dogs saliva has enzymes that destroys harmful bacteria but also when a dog licks its wound its tongue gets rid of dead tissue so the wounds heal faster.This may not have the same effect for people. All animals have certain naturally occurring bacteria that live in their mouths. These same bacteria infecting your wound would likely lead to a serious medical problem. If you want to experiment with bodily fluids on your own wound, try your own tears rather than some butt-licking, carrion-eating animal's saliva.
Because they have saliva (spit) like you.
every 7 seconds
Most big dogs quickly produce lots of flem and saliva, and henceforth, your dogs flem and saliva is mixed with the water as he/she is lapping it.
No they have less because their saliva is more acidic
Because the food that they eat are not cooked
Saliva running out the side of the mouth is a condition worst in dogs and wild animals. This can mean that the animal has rabies.
It could mean that ur deheydrated. Either that or that ur turning into a dog cause dogs have a lot of saliva too.
Either would survive just fine if they were born and raised wild, they were bred from wild animals I think cats and dogs have a pretty good chance of survivng too. But honestly I think that the cats could get a kill faster and I think that the dogs would live faster because they are stronger and will work with other dogs.