By following the accepted medical procedure. If you're a doctor, you should already know what this is; if you're not, you have no business treating anybody.
No
A healthy diet is vital for anyone who has TB; foods should include plenty of vegetables and fruits, lean protein, and unsaturates fats.
The bundle of nerve fibers that carries information between the brain's right and left hemispheres is known as the corpus callosum. When this structure is severed in a surgical procedure to treat epilepsy, the patient is referred to as a split-brain patient.
Tuberculosis (TB) is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis, not a virus. Lung TB is the most common form, affecting the lungs, while brain TB, also known as tuberculous meningitis, is a rare form that affects the membranes surrounding the brain and spinal cord. Both conditions are serious and require medical treatment.
Yes, one can contract TB from inhaling the infected particles from someone who has TB, so therefore kissing someone with TB will definitely give you the disease.
green vegetable
That's like asking why a firefighter has to right to not be incinerated, it's logical. A nurses job is to care, assist, treat etc. Say under the circumstances of say, a TB patient coming into the hospital, and asking a nurse to not only treat the patient, without any choice, but to not wear a safety mask as well?
Yes, it is possible that a person previously diagnosed with active TB and was completely cured be suspected to haveÊlatent TB. Aside from the medicine that cured the patient of active TB, there is also a high chance that the body's immune system has controlled the infection but unable to completely remove it from the body. Hence, the infection remains in the body, lying in an inactive or latent state.
No. TB is commonly resistant to numerous antibiotics. It's generally treated with a cocktail of antibiotics, none are Penicillin.
very unlikely
With a full treatment TB is completely cured. A reactivation of the disease can sometimes occur after several years
yes