i make your body turn red from your feet to your head and makes u numb and also make u throwup and i 1 -3 weeks u die so get help soon
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Tularemia is a rare infectious disease that typically attacks the skin, eyes, lymph nodes and lungs. Tularemia — also called rabbit fever or deer fly fever — is caused by the bacterium Francisella tularensis. There is usually an ulcer seen at the site of infection.
Tularemia can lead to skin ulcers, typically at the site of infection such as a tick bite or handling infected animals. Q fever, Ebola, and brucellosis do not typically produce skin ulcers as part of their clinical presentation.
A red spot on the skin enlarging to an ulcer, enlarged lymph nodes (swollen glands) in the groin or armpits, headache, muscle pain, shortness of breath, fever, chills, sweating, weight loss, and joint stiffness.
Humans can contract diseases from rabbits such as tularemia, rabbit fever, and ringworm. It is important to practice good hygiene and handle rabbits carefully to prevent the spread of these diseases.
infects a variety of wild animals, including rabbits, deer, squirrels, muskrat, and beaver.
Tularemia
Tularemia can spread by handling or eating insufficently cooked rabbit meat, handling an infected carcass, or coming in contact with fluids from an infected deerfly, horsefly, tick, or mosquitoe.
Rabbit Fever - film - was created in 2010.
The duration of Rabbit Fever - film - is 1.42 hours.
Five types of illness may occur, depending on where/how the bacteria enter the body: Ulceroglandular/glandular tularemia, Oculoglandular tularemia,Oropharyngeal and gastrointestinal tularemia, Pulmonary tularemia, Typhoidal tularemia
Ralph Emerson Yeatter has written: 'Tularemia, weather, and the rabbit populations' -- subject(s): Tularemia, Rabbits 'Bird dogs in sport and conservation' -- subject(s): Training, Dogs, Bird dogs