Any severe cold, pneumonia or smoker's cough could mimic valley fever.
Diabetes will make it harder to over come the Valley Fever. When two or more diseases are in the same person, it can make things more difficult to recover.
Some diseases spread by flies and mosquitoes are very serious and can threaten the lives of both humans and animals, such as livestock. Examples of 3 diseases include Rift Valley Fever, Ephemeral Fever, and Bluetongue.
A low neutrophil count along with a high lymphocyte count can be an indication of viral infections, autoimmune diseases and leukemias. That might rule out valley fever.
There is no 'mimic' disease. You must have read something about how certain symptoms can mimic diseases of one kind or another.
Valley fever is not caused by a bacteria and so an antibiotic cannot be used to treat Valley fever. Valley fever is treated with an antifungal.
The scientific name for Valley fever is coccidioidomycoses.
At Valley Forge soldiers grew weak from not having enough food or warm clothing. Roughly a quarter of them died from malnutrition, exposure to the cold, or diseases such as smallpox and typhoid fever.
cholera, typhoid, dysentery as well as those carried by mosquito's and other hosts in the proximity to water: malaria, yellow fever, rift valley fever AMONGST OTHERS
Coccidioidomycoses is called Valley fever because many cases occurred in San Joaquin Valley.
At Valley Forge, soldiers grew weak from not having enough food or warm clothing. Roughly a quarter of them died from malnutrition, exposure to the cold, or diseases such as smallpox and typhoid fever.
Ohio Valley Fever does not respond to antibiotics because it is caused by a fungus, Histoplasma capsulatum, not a bacteria.Ohio Valley fever does respond to antifungal drug.
Avian influenza, babesiosis, cholera, ebola, intestinal and external parasites, lyme disease, Plague, Red tides, Rift valley fever, sleeping sickness, Tubercolosis, yellow fever