Just because you have a bacterial infection does not always mean you have to have a shot. You can cure a bacterial infection with antibiotics depending on how bad it is.
Go to the vet. Tell them you need antibotics. If you don't want to pay for a check up tell them specifically you just want antibotics. They'll give you the medicine and then you have the tricky task of getting them to swallow it. Antibotics cost about 15 dollars.
There are both viral and bacterial forms of pneumonia.
I would say no, not because it would hurt your infection, but because you would spread it to everybody else who is swimming in the pool. You should just work on curing your infection, then going swimming.
Not necessarily because it could just mean that you have a bacterial infection.
It is a bacterial infection called Trichomycosis. Daily cleansing and benzoyl peroxide will get rid of the infection.
as far as I remember, Bacteria make spore to resist and protect themselves from advrse environmental conditions, but forming spore in Fungus is just a step of their reproduction, both sexual and asexual; so bacterial spore is more resistant to harsh conditions rather than fungal spores.Dr. Kaveh Haratian
It could be any bacterial pathogen and could also be from other types of pathogens, like viral, parasitic, and fungal infections. What makes an infection "nosocomial" is just that it was caught at a health care location, such as hospital, surgical center, lab, etc. Of bacteria, one of the most common types to be circulating in a health care setting is staphylococcus, but it is just one of any bacterial infection that could be the agent involved in a nosocomial infection.
Yes. I just tried to gargle with it to get rid of a bacterial infection, and it triggered an automatic vomit response when it hit the back of my throat.
When I had my fungal bladder infection the symptoms were exactly the same as a normal bacterial UTI in fact the doctor in the ER treated it as a bacterial bladder infection it wasn't until I went to my primary doctor and had more testing done just 2 days later that it was found to be fungal. The only thing that was different was that there were large floating particles in my urine my doctor told me these were collanies of fungi the smell of my urine was different than when I had bacterial bladder infections. Mind you I have had several bacterial UTI's. I hope this helps you If you do have a fungal bladder infection and are female they need to check and see if you have the same infection in you vagina.
There are several possible reasons. He may have been correctly diagnosed and appropriately treated and it is just going to take some time for the body to heal. He may have been correctly diagnosed with a bacterial infection but the antibiotic is not working. He may have been incorrectly diagnosed with a bacterial infection when what he really has is something else like a viral infection, asthma, allergies, reflux, or some other problem.
Definitely not. Though there are vaccinations targeted at some of the causative bacteria, there are still cases of meningitis. Bacterial meningitis is a broad term which encompasses any inflammation of the meninges caused by bacterial invasion. While there are several bacteria which are normally to blame, more bacteria other than just those inoculated against can cause this infection.
no. bacterial is contagouse, and is charicterised but bright pinkness in affected area while viral is not contagious and is less serious characterised by bloodshot eyes and itchiness, there is also a version that comes from allergies, but that goes away on its own.