In serious cases of food poisoning, medications may be given to stop abdominal cramping and vomiting. Medications are not usually given for the diarrhea, since stopping it might keep toxins in the body longer
Depending upon the type of bacteria, the severity of the symptoms and the patient's susceptibility, antibiotics might indeed be used. See Related Links. But that is generally the exception and not the rule. Most healthy people can fight off a bout of food poisoning successfully if hydration is maintained. Adding antibiotics to the mix - especially if the causative organism is unknown - could make things worse by killing off the body's beneficial flora. Another reason for not using antibiotics could be that the illness is an intoxication rather than an infection. Antibiotics won't inactivate toxins left behind by bacteria.
Those suffering from food poisoning should reduce all sugar and normal food for eight to 24 hours, and increase fluids to avoid dehydration.
Yes.They are among the most preffered antibiotics for pneumonia.
Any skin disease caused by Bacteria can be treated by antibiotics e.g.boils .Allergies can't be treated by antibiotics .
Antibiotics will not work in viruses.
Because it has supposedly not been treated with growth hormones, antibiotics, pesticides, or fertilizers.
Bacteria
Today, they are treated with antibiotics.
Hemophilus infections are treated with antibiotics.
Bacteria are treated with antibiotics and viruses are treated with antiviral medications.
Yes.
In the food you eat, if it smells it has food poisoning in it