The rotavirus infection is diagnosed by identifying the virus in the patient's stool. This is done using electron microscopy.
"Oral rehydration therapy," or drinking enough fluids to replace those lost through bowel movements and vomiting, is the primary aim of the treatment.
The best way to prevent the disease is by proper food handling and thorough hand washing, after using the toilet and whenever hands are soiled.
Most of the infections resolve spontaneously. Dehydration due to severe diarrhea is one of the major complications.
Rotavirus.
Coughing is treated with cough medicine. If you have an infection, such as an upper respiratory infection, that is causing the coughing, then that may be treated with an antibiotic, but a cough that is not due to an infection is not treated with an antibiotic.
Uncomplicated cystitis is treated with antibiotics.
Bacterial infections are treated with oral, Intramuscular, and/or intravenous antibiotic medication.
No. The yeast infection can remain for years if you don't get it treated.
If not treated, then yes it can.
just ask luke harvey when he has a infection on his 4 skin
Sepsis treatment is usually treated by the administration of antibiotics. If there is a source of infection, such as a foreign body, it's removal is also part of the treatment.
Chlamydia trachomatis improves rapidly with erythromycin. Chlamydia psittaci infection is treated with tetracycline, bed rest, oxygen supplementation, and codeine-containing cough preparations. Chlamydia pneumoniae infection is treated with erythromycin
Yes , renal failure from a urinary infection can be fatal if not treated by a veterinarian .
I'm assuming you're talking about a piercing... Generally, if there is irritation once the irritant is removed you should be okay. If there is also an infection, the infection should be treated, and as there is no longer an irritant there the infection should go away (provided this is what caused the infection, and provided the infection is being treated correctly).