matter help: Okay, so I am playing this awesome game called Dead Rising 2. - Help.com

Leveler013
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An Unknown Location

Okay, so I am playing this awesome game called Dead Rising 2.

THe girl in the story got bitten by a zombie and needs this vaccine called Zombrex in order to survive. Thinking about this vaccine concept, does it matter whether you inject it into a vein or artery? Since your artery is a main blood vessel, wouldn’t the vaccine circulate faster? Realistically, is there any benefit to injecting (a vaccine for this matter) into a vein versus an artery?

This open post was written 2 years, 4 months ago | V/U/S: 386, 3, 3 | Edit Post | Leave a reply | Report Post


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Blest offline Verified User (2 years, 10 months) Long Term User Shouts: 1 #
An Undisclosed Location | 2 years, 4 months ago (11 minutes after post)

You inject vaccines into a vein, because it is returning to your heart. It will circulate faster if it goes directly to your heart first, rather than having to travel around through your arm, or leg, or wherever you injected it, and THEN going to your heart.

The heart distributes blood to the entire body simultaneously. So you don’t have one part affected before the others.

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Jalex offline Verified User (4 years) Long Term User Shouts: 5 #
An Unknown Location | 2 years, 4 months ago (26 minutes after post)

This game speaks lies.

There is no cure for the zombie virus.

And the blood stops circulating when you turn anyway.

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Leveler013 offline Verified User (3 years, 6 months) Long Term User Shouts: 1 #
An Unknown Location | 2 years, 4 months ago (3 days, 9 hours after post)

Blest wrote:
You inject vaccines into a vein, because it is returning to your heart. It will circulate faster if it goes directly to your heart first, rather than having to travel around through your arm, or leg, or wherever you injected it, and THEN going to your heart.

The heart distributes blood to the entire body simultaneously. So you don’t have one part affected before the others.

ahhhh, okay. This makes sense, thanks.

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