the odor of your body is occured by sweat.
by the use of drugs are medecines but some bacteria are useful for our body and if they are killed u will be killed
Yes, it is common for the body to be resistant to bacteria and infections that it has already encountered and survived through.
Bacteriaophage litterally means Eater of Bacteria. Viruses don't eat bacteria, they hijack the cellular machinery to create more copies. Viruses do kill bacteria, but that is distinct from eating them.
The weight of bacteria in human body is estimated to be 1 to 2 percent of the entire body mass. Bacteria is useful and can be harmful to the body.
The body was buried in a peat bog, where phenolic acids from brophyte plants prevented bacteria from destroying the soft tissues (as in normal burials). Conversely, the acids dissolved the exteriors of most of the bones.
In short no. The reason a submerged body wil float is because of the gasses created by bacteria as they degrade the organic matter. Once tha body has been enbalmed it will not rot, the bacteria will not act on it and thus not create the gasses.
All of these
A great example would be Antibiotics and Bacteria. When humans create an antibiotic, it wipes out a lot of the bacteria in your body. The ones that that don't get affected by it probably have a resistance to the antibiotic. As those bacteria multiply and grow, the others die out due to the antibioitic. Soon the anti-biotic resistant bacteria will take over the human body, and the humans would have to find another antibiotic to counter the new bacteria. The cycle goes on and on......
which part of the body TB bacteria effects
No, some bacteria is good for your body. For example, when you eat dairy products such as yogurt, it contains great amounts of bacteria that is good for your body. Not all bacteria in your body causes disease.
Depends on the bacteria, most bacteria in our body is ok at 98.6 degrees. so by the body elevating our temps with fever we try to kill the bacteria.
Bacteria can make you sick by entering your body and "attacking" you. In response, your body heats up in attempt to "fry" the bacteria.