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MRSA is not a disease, it stands for "Methicilin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus", so it's a strain of S.aureus.
SARS is not a pathogen, it is an syndrome similar to AIDS. It is caused by a virus called coronavirus, but it is the mutated strain.
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Yes,but MOST people do NOT. If it is a resistant strain of strep,or your body has immunity to penicillin...
It is one strain of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus isolated from patients with bacteria in their blood.
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Anand Mohan Chakarwarty. The concept of a antibacterial-resistant strain of germ or virus is predicted by Evolutionary Theory.
There was the spread of a plague but the exact nature of the plague is unknown. It is widely believed to be a strain of Bubonic Plague.
MERSA and MRSA are the same bacteria, Staph Aureous. When then become resistant to a certain antibiotic called methicillin they then get the designation of methicillin resistant Staph Aureous. The difficulty in treating this super bug is that is is resistant to many, but not all antibiotics.MSRA is a contagious disease that is a strain of bacterial staph infection.
Yes, although I don't believe the strains are similar or contagious between humans, cats, dogs. In other words, the strain dogs get can only be spread to other dogs (commonly known as kennel cough), the strain cats get can only be spread to other cats and the strain humans get is also known as the common head cold.
The antibiotic tested is not likely to be effective in eradicating the infection. *The infectious agents are a strain that have developed (evolved) a natural resistance to a particular antibiotic.