If you have symptoms of shakiness, foul smell, painful urination, discharge and frequent urges to pee fatigue, discolored urine, pain in your kidney area, itching and or burning, you may have a bladder infection.
Some common symptoms involving the bladder include leakage (such as during excessive activity, sneezing, or laughing), frequent urination, or pain while urinating. Any of these can indicate an infection, which while easily treated by antibiotics, can become serious quickly. It's best to see your doctor if you show any of these symptoms.
Yes, it is possible to have an infection without experiencing any symptoms. This is known as an asymptomatic infection, where the person is infected with a pathogen but does not show any signs or symptoms of illness.
Until at least a couple of days after you begin a course of antibiotics. Note that the ENTIRE course of antibiotics must be taken in order to make sure the infection does not recur. If you only take the antibiotic till the symptoms are gone, there may still be bacteria in your urinary tract that were not yet killed.
Depends on what ailment the symptoms are going with.Can he show symptoms of being in heat? Not likely.Can he show symptoms of having parvo? Yup.Can he show symptoms of exhaustion? Yup.
10 days
It would just be tested for the bladder infection. If you want them to test for pregnancy, I'm sure they will.
10 days
That varies from woman to woman, but a yeast "infection" isnt' something you normally catch. It's overgrowth of a germ normally found in the vagina to the point that it makes symptoms. You can't diagnose a yeast "infection" in a woman with no symptoms.
50% of men infected show symptoms of chlamydia.
Asymptomatic means 'without symptoms. So 'asymptomatic carrier' means a person who carries an infection without having any symptoms. As an example, men often 'carry' yeast in the urethra and on the penis, but do not show symptoms. However, an affected man can pass yeast to a sexual partner.
The initial infection is rapid, although there is often a prolonged latency period before symptoms show. It may take months or years after infection before symptoms become apparent.
Symptoms of viral infection typically begin during the replication and spread phase of the infection cycle, when the virus has replicated enough to start causing damage to the host cells and triggering immune responses that lead to symptoms.