Many anorexics deal with a lot while suffering from the disease. It can cause many physical and mealth problems, pain, and high amounts of mental distress. Anorexics often suffer from isolation and depression, too.
Yes.
Everywhere you go there's food and there's NO avoiding it, except staying home. Anorexics can't have "normal" relationships because they won't eat with people.
Mono is an infectious disease that can be spread through bodily fluids. This disease can go into remission and come back.
The monkeypox virus does go through a lytic cycle in order to replicate. This virus is a zoonotic disease that can affect both animals and humans.
A good start is the website for the Huntington's Disease Society of America for more information. While HD does not have a cure, there are treatments that can help manage the symptoms of HD.
For those who enter rehab or medical help facilities, most will recover. Roughly 60% will eventually go on to live as much as a "normal" life after that as possible. Of those who go through rehab, about 40% will relapse. However, when treatment is delayed or never occurs at all, roughly 20% of anorexics will die.
Because the main problem is the fact that they don't want to eat so they know they will have to is they go to rehab. Also they don't see a problem with themselves.
Puberty !
prokaryotes go through binary fission (budding), while eukaryotes go through mitosis
Anorexics will still gorw, just at a stunted pace. (Lack of nutrients prevents proper growth.) Still, people will grow and some will be tall. Many cases of anorexica often happen after most initial growth spruts, so the person will already possibly be tall.
Parkinson's disease does not go into remission in the traditional sense, as it is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder. While symptoms can fluctuate and some individuals may experience periods of relative stability, the underlying disease continues to progress. Treatment can help manage symptoms and improve quality of life, but there is currently no cure or way to reverse the disease.
Anorexics eat very, very little. What they do eat is usually fairly low in calories, too. It varies per individual, and on how severe the anorexia is. Some go days without eating (called fasting), while others stick to low-calorie diet plans.