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It protects the body from viruses and bacteria.
The immune system helps assure that diseases and viruses do not reach the cardiovascular system which includes the heart and blood vessels. :]
Many things! For one thing, a pathological virus can take over the body, such as computer viruses can. There are also multiple versions of viruses and pathological viruses. That and they can be blocked out. While computers can use antivirus programs, we have immune systems. ~SwaggaCat
The immune systems protects the body from viruses. First you have your physical barriers like your skin, tears, hair and mucus then you have your immune system which are white blood cells and pus.
You can.
With our immune systems getting weaker viruses that enter your body cannot be fought off and the result to that is a possibility for cancer.
the viruses help the immune system adapt and get stronger
Parts of individual bacteria or viruses that have been killed and broken up into inactive bits. The immune system can recognize them and develop immunity.
Body has got immune system. This immune system or the body immunity forms the antibodies to fight the viruses. The immunity against the viruses is usually life long.
Linux operating systems are well protected, but not immune to viruses, and can still be afflicted by rootkits and trojans. 'Kaiten' and 'rexob' are the names of two Linux trojans. 'Brundle', 'Nuxbee' and 'VIT' are just three Linux viruses.
Some viruses can be killed with disinfectants and some disinfectants can kill viruses. However, many viruses are spore formers so they go dormant instead of dying in unfavorable conditions.For H1N1 disinfectants for hard surfaces see the related link below.
Yes. Microbes are living microscopic organisms, most are one-celled but not all, and they do die. In the case of all types of microbes, except viruses, they can be killed or die. For example, when we take antibiotics for a bacterial infection, we are killing the bacteria and then our immune system cleans up. Viruses are somewhere in between a living organism and a chemical structure, they can be destroyed with antiviral medications or by our immune systems but that destruction is not technically a death. For this reason, some scientists do not include the viruses in the classification of microorganisms but most do include them. Obviously the microscopic animals (protozoa, for example), the microscopic plants (like green algae), and the other microbes that are all living organisms can in turn die or be killed.