Yes, that is what diseases do.
disease affect organism in different ways at different levels of the organism ,for example , cancer affects cells , flu affects the respiratory system,etc....................
disease affect organism in different ways at different levels of the organism ,for example , cancer affects cells , flu affects the respiratory system,etc....................
disease affect organism in different ways at different levels of the organism ,for example , cancer affects cells , flu affects the respiratory system,etc....................
To answer this question we need to know what disease and what organism. Diseases have many different ways in which they can attack organisms but if you can give more information I will be happy to help.
colds, and infectious diseases
Mutations can give an organism diseases and all kinds of malfunctions of their organs. It can affects their life span and how they live about. Some mutations can be awful like that, but other times it can be very helpful and actually help an organism have a better life.
Diseases that can be transmitted from one organism to another
it will spread out, and can cause diseases.
Thyme can't Give you diseases nor affect Diseases
Diseases do not cause unicellular organisms; unicellular organisms cause diseases.
Fungal diseases grow on the organism that they infect. While infecting an organism, they will produce spores that will spread to and infect another organism. Some are able to hang out in the soil (or water, for aquatic fungal diseases) until they come in contact with a suitable host.
Any disease can affect the organ system because it invades the body and alters the way things work. Different diseases will affect different organ systems. This diseases can be caused by genetics, bacteria, poor nutrition, viruses, parasites and fungi. Diseases will damage or change the way the organ system works, causing harm to the body.Disease affects an organism by disrupting the organism's homeostasis. Homeostasis is the process by which an organism maintains a steady internal environment (stable body temperature, blood sugar level, electrolyte balance, etc.). A disease will disrupt this process.For example, Helicobacter pylori (the bacteria responsible for most stomach ulcers in humans) disrupts homeostasis by interfering with the production of the mucus layer that protects the stomach lining cells from the hydrochloric acid in the stomach lumen.