No. An antibiotic is a medicine used to kill bacteria that cause infections in humans and other animals. As it is not alive, it is not considered a disease causing agent. But, if you are allergic to a particular antibiotic it can cause anything from a mild (e.g. itching) to a severe (e.g. anaphylaxis, which can cause a person to stop breathing) immune reaction.
Another problem is when antibiotics are overly prescribed, used in too small of doses, or given for the wrong conditions. Then microbes adapt and become resistant to the antibiotics.
pathogen
A general term for any non-disease causing agent is ________.
Pathogen
helloo youu(:
Pathogen or disease-causing agent
A vector. A vector is a disease causing agent. Such as ticks, or mosquitos.
nonpathogen
That depends on what the disease is. Oftentimes, there is more than one antibiotic that can be used for a disease. There are what are known as "broad-spectrum antibiotics", which can be used for many different types of infections, and if one of these does not help, another may. But antibiotics are ONLY for the treatment of infection, not viruses nor any other disease agent.
A carrier is an individual who harbors an infectious agent but does not show symptoms of the disease themselves. They can unknowingly transmit the agent to others, contributing to the spread of the disease in a population.
A carcinogen is an agent that causes cancer.
Mononucleosis is a viral disease, it is caused by a virus. Amoxicillan is an antibiotic, which means it kills disease causing bacteria. It would not affect the mono virus. So, the answer is no.
A pathogen is an agent, such as a virus, bacterium, parasite, or fungus, that causes disease in its host organism. It can infect the host and disrupt normal bodily functions, leading to symptoms of illness.