no, i don't think so.
Yes - the sugars act as a diuretic in the kidneys and draw water out of the blood.
Yes. The infection from infected teeth can affect your whole body. Your infected teeth can even affect your heart and cause your death. The high white blood count could be the least of your worries.
Every infect, which will go into the blood circulation, may cause blood poisoning.
Some triggers the would cause a diabetic's sugars to rise include: *Stress and *Illness and medication Hoped this helped :)
No, but this is a common misconception. Whilst diabetes can cause high blood sugar levels, high blood sugar levels can't cause diabetes. There is a variety of causes for it, but this isn't one.
High and low blood sugars are dangerous. You need to stop them before they get any worse because your body can't stop them anymore. Low blood sugar can cause: * seizures * coma * death High blood sugars can cause: * extreme vomiting * coma * death
Yes. But it is most unlikely to happen.
Not usually. If they are causing pain or are infected they could.
Herpetic whitlow itself will not cause blood poisoning. In the unlikely event that the lesions are secondarily infected, perhaps you could get a lymphangitis, but that's not common.
Yes
Salmonella does not typically cause bloody urine. However, it can cause bloody stool. The illness can be passed to other people through urine, blood, and stool, so stay away from other people if infected.
Malaria is transmitted either through a mosquito infected with a parasite, or in rare cases, though blood transmission.