Sore throat
Pharyngitis is the medical name for a sore throat. Pharyngitis is contagious through direct contact with mucus, nasal discharge, or saliva.
Uncertain etiology means the cause is unknown.
Pharyngitis is the medical term that refers to a sore throat. Some common symptoms of pharyngitis include scratchiness, pain, coughing and difficulty swallowing.
Pseudomonas is a bacterium. It doesn't have an etiology; it is an etiology. It can cause skin infections, UTIs, and other illnesses.
Etiology is what causes a disease or how it occurs based on studies
Staphylococcus is a bacterium. It doesn't have an etiology, it is an etiology for infections including boils, folliculitis, some UTIs, and impetigo.
The scientific name for a sore throat is "pharyngitis."
Pharyngitis is an inflammation of the throat. One treatment could be using salt water gargles.
Pharyngitis
adenoids
Infective etiology (or infectious etiology) in chest x-ray is an detailed examination of how the disease has spread in the patient's chest.
Etiology refers to the course of a disease. What that means is that it is the history of the progression and development of it. Some conditions have a common etiology because they develop the same way. For example, a cold and a flu; they start out the same, but then change their etiology once they develop more.