There are 63 known diseases that a mouse can get, excluding STD's.
RAT! plus they have more diseases.
Mouse feces carries diseases.
Mouse harbours some zoonoses that are not human friendly and could lead to the initiation of some diseases
The mice are very likely to fight and kill each other. Also, the wild mouse could have diseases which it could pass on to the tame mouse.
mice can sometimes spread diseases that can kill numorus numbers of human beings and such.
A 45 day-old mouse is already an adult. They turn into adult mice in about 24 to 30 days. A hairless mouse is a breed of mouse.
Yes they do. There is a disease called the Hantu virus that is spread by dried mouse droppings.
A human can contract hanta virus (a respitory virus) if they breathe the air around infected mouse feces that has been in a contained area.
Put it in a barn or keep it in a cage with bedding, water and food. Do not let it loose in your house. And watch out, he or she might have diseases. You could go on goggle images and type in a female mouse or a male one.
I would strongly suggest leaving it alone - a wild mouse, particularly one caught as an adult, is likely to bite and otherwise be dangerous and destructive. It is possible for you to get a variety of dieases, both from the mouse (such as hantavirus in the Southwest United States) and from the parasites on the mouse (such as the Black Death/plague caused by Yersinia pestiswhich is carried by rat fleas that will also hop on mice).If you want a pet mouse, check your local shelter or pet store - you can generally find a tame, disease-free mouse to have as a pet from one of these two places.
Usaully dogs only eat already dead mice, but don't lay a mouse right in front of your dog.