Yes, it is possible to get scabies again after it has cleared up. Scabies is caused by a mite that can be transmitted through close personal contact or sharing contaminated items. If you come into contact with someone who has an active infestation or their belongings, you can become reinfested. Proper treatment and hygiene practices are essential to prevent recurrence.
yes, it will. i had it 1 year ago. I saw specialists and applied cream, but didnt work. it went away 3 months ago by itself.
It is not being treated
You could try, but it won't make the scabies go away. Scabies are mites, insect-like parasites that live in the skin tissues. To clear an infestation with scabies you will need anti-parasiticide from your physician.
Yes
It's like any other disease. It never really went away.
If it appeared then went away again, it is doubtful that it was cancer, as the lump will remain in place. It may have simply been a tube that you felt, or possibly a fatty deposit. Get it checked by a doctor just in case.
is is scabies heterotroph
Infestation with huge numbers of mites (on the order of thousands to millions).This form of scabies, with its major infestation, is referred to as crusted scabies or Norwegian scabies.
They all have scabies.
cream get rid of scabies
You have high risk of scabies if your skin comes in contact with the skin of a person having scabies because scabies is a contagious disease.
I'll politely answer this question with a long and complicated question: Is it possible that doctors don't want to admit that scabies can enter the eye balls and the brain because they themselves currently have (active or inactive scabies), or have had scabies in their own eyes and brain, and instead, these doctors tell all of their scabies patients that they have a psychological problem and should see a psychiatrist, so that their scabies patients will get out of their office because they fear being infected again, or they fear that it will become public knowledge that they themselves have or had scabies and could possibly be infecting other patients, increasing their chances of losing their medical license to practice medicine altogether, and/or the financial loses involved in losing current or potential patients when it becomes public knowledge that scabies-infected patients have been visiting their office and exam rooms; without proper and costly sterilization? MONEY!