Created by Susan Stagg-Williams, Dieter Andrew Schweiss, Gavin Sy, and H. Scott Fogler, 1994
			
Updated by Apeksha Bandi, Gustav Sandborgh,  and Arthur Shih, 2013
		
		
		
			 Cobras have several methods for delivering their deadly venom to their prey. 
			  Some cobras can spit their venom into a victim's eyes, causing extreme pain 
			  and blindness. However, the most common and well known method of venom delivery 
			  is injection into a victim's body through their bite. 
			
			 
			
				 
				
A cobra striking
			
			
			
			
			Cobras belong to the sub-group of snakes known as elapids; there 
			are over 270 species of cobras and their relatives.  An elapid's venom 
			contains postsynaptic neurotoxins that spread rapidly in its victim's 
			bloodstream, causing respiratory failure and, eventually, death.
			
			
			
			Cobra venom is an example of a molecule that prohibits the interaction of
			acetylcholine molecules (transmitted from nerve endings surrounding the 
			diaphragm muscle) with the receptor sites on the diaphragm muscle.  (See 
			the section on Human Respiration for more 
			details).  It binds to the receptor sites, blocking them from interacting 
			with acetylcholine molecules.  Even worse, the venom molecule will not 
			immediately break down and vacate the receptor site, effectively removing 
			the site from active duty.
			
			
			
			It has been determined that even if 85 to 90% of the receptor sites on 
			your diaphragm become blocked by venom, you will cease breathing.  With 
			cobra venoms, this process can take as little as 30 minutes.  The only way 
			to counteract the effects of cobra venom (or most other poisonous snake 
			venoms) is to inject the appropriate antivenom shortly after the bite 
			occurs.  If antivenom is unavailable, your life can still be saved by 
			putting you on an artificial respirator until the paralysis of the 
			diaphragm muscle wears off.
			
			
			
			(If this watered-down explanation of effects of cobra venom wasn't enough 
			for you, then check out a more-detailed explanation
			of the effects of cobra venom.)