Yes, if memory serves. Since E-Coli is a bacteria that alone would make a reasonable assumption that it could be in feces, but I suppose it might depends on what is consumed, the type of body, health issues, etc.
Typhoid Fever. Coming from drinking water contaminated by Human Feces.
yes
You cannot get any diseases from human urine. In fact, human urine is sterile and so it cannot carry any diseases.
NO- Do Not Eat Feces By Consuming your own or other people's feces you carry the risk of contracting diseases spread through fecal matter, such as Hepatitis A, Hepatitis E, pneumonia, and influenza. Coprophagia (feces eating) also carries the risk of contracting intestinal parasites.
Yes, to humans, human feces is generally worse than dog feces. See, other species don't get all the same diseases that we do, and we cannot contract everything they can. However, dog feces is bad enough. A little girl in the UK received and eye injury and then fell in some dog excrement. The feces caused her eye to become severely infected, and she ended up losing that eye.
Hepatitus b
At best, nothing at all other than bad breath and possible indigestion. However, fecal matter does carry diseases which can make you quite sick, particularly if the feces is from someone who is sick.
From the DoodyCalls Web site, this list includes the most common diseases born by dog feces:HeartwormsWhipwormsHookwormsRoundwormsTapewormsParvoCoronaGiardiasisSalmonellosisCryptosporidiosisCampylobacteriosisSo it's not a good idea, clearly, to leave dog feces in a home. It's also a good idea to pick up after your dog using a sturdy plastic bag.
Human feces orders do no cause illness. They are the red flags that something is off in the digestive system, metabolic system, urea cycle and other areas,
You can catch toxoplasmosis from mice feces in your home. Toxoplasmosis is a parasitic disease that pets can carry, especially cats.
Human feces is composed of unusable food and million of bacteria.
Yes they can get worms