Not necessarily. Many many things can cause diarrhea. I suggest you take your cat into your local Veterinarian and have her checked out, take in a sample of her feces too. She will dehydrate quickly if nothing is done to treat her so get her into your Vet pronto.
Shigella are extremely infectious bacteria, and ingestion of just 10 organisms is enough to cause severe diarrhea and dehydration.
Magnesium salt it can cause severe diarrhea.
It doesn't. Cholera kills by dehydration via the severe diarrhea it causes!
I had severe diarrhea, vomiting and severe gas pains.
bad food
== == an infectious disease transmitted from person to person or by the bite of fleas from an infected rodent, especially a rat, and characterized by chills, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and the formation of buboes, death was most often the result as there was no cure available when the epidemic was at its most severe.
== == an infectious disease transmitted from person to person or by the bite of fleas from an infected rodent, especially a rat, and characterized by chills, fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and the formation of buboes, death was most often the result as there was no cure available when the epidemic was at its most severe.
flu
Dehydration
It depends on how severe it is. Usually, diarrhea is not that severe, and over-the-counter medication like Immodium will make sure it's under control. If that's the case, you can surely go to school.However, if the diarrhea is severe and not under control even with medication, you need to go to the doctor so you don't get dehydrated and end up in the hospital.
While severe headaches may signal something more serious, the symptom will not alter pH. Severe vomiting can lead to metabolic alkalosis, prolonged diarrhea can lead to metabolic acidosis, and hyperventilation can lead to respiratory alkalosis.
Yes, diarrhea is a symptom of mono. Be sure to keep your body filled with pure water or other light liquids and if the diarrhea becomes severe, contact your health professional.