Theay are some new therapy in USA (stage three clinical) that promise more chance of surwey to the people that are infectet with anthrax.one of them it is raxibacumab.This is a monclonal antibody that it block anthrax toxines.
yo mama is so fat
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yes.With antibiotics.
there are three form of infections with anthrax. Pulmonary anthrax that it is deadly if not treated early gastrointestinal anthrax fatality rates 20- 60% cutaneous form of anthrax that it is really fatal
. FDA-approved agents include ciprofloxacin, doxycycline and penicillin.
nope. there's an 80 percent fatality rate. if you have it i feel sorry for you.
It is a bacteria and the infection can be treated with large doses of intravenous and oral antibiotics, such as ciprofloxacin, doxycycline, erythromycin, vancomycin or penicillin.
No. It would have to be changed to "You were treated to a great dinner."
Farm animals. Although, in the US we vaccinate farm animals against anthrax. World wide, however, sheep and cows are the most common victims of anthrax. It is more of a livestock disease than a human one. Humans are certainly susceptible to anthrax and if you walk around barefoot on a farm with an open cut you may find yourself with an anthrax infection. Anthrax is not very dangerous unless it is prepared as a weapon. You are in more danger from influenza or pneumonia. ;)
Anthrax in animals may cause staggering, bloody discharge, convulsions, and suffocation, and may be fatal almost immediately. In humans, if the bacteria enter through a cut or other opening in the skin, a dark, itchy bump like an insect bite appears and then develops into an open sore with a black area in the center. It can be treated with antimicrobial drugs, but death results in about 20 percent of untreated cases Symptoms of inhaled anthrax in humans are at first like a cold or the flu, with general aches and pains, fever, fatigue, cough, and mild chest pain. Inhaled anthrax is fatal unless the infected person is immediately treated with antibiotics. The gastrointestinal form of anthrax in humans causes nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, and severe diarrhea. The disease can be fatal in 20 percent to 60 percent of cases.
No one they were treated the same way they always had been as second class citizens.
Yes. Anthrax is a disease caused by the Anthracis bacterium. It is usually found in cattle but can be transmitted to people through contact with diseased animals, their hair or hides, the soil of a pasture in which a diseased animal was grazing, and by transmission through the air. Anthrax occurring on the skin is serious but usually not fatal if treated. Anthrax occurring in the lungs (because the bacterial spores were inhaled) has a high fatality rate.