Tuberculosis (TB) and malaria are both Infectious Diseases but are caused by different pathogens. TB is caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium tuberculosis and primarily affects the lungs, spreading through airborne droplets. In contrast, malaria is caused by parasites of the Plasmodium genus, transmitted through the bites of infected mosquitoes, and primarily affects red blood cells. While both diseases can cause severe health issues, their modes of transmission, causative agents, and treatments differ significantly.
the difference between aids and tb is that tb is tb and aids is aids
She had malaria and TB (not quite shore about TB) and died of a heart attack and a stroke simultaneously.
HIV/AIDS, Malaria, and TB
liver disease malignancy malaria tb leishmaniasis
dysentery, malaria, pneumonia, typhus, TB
culex mosquito spread malaria in sparrow but anopheles mosquito spread malaria in human beings.
No. Cuba has eradicated malaria, along with several other diseases that still plague its neighbours, such as rubella, pertussis, tb, etc.
chagas disease, dengue fever, helminths, leprosy, malaria, tuberculosis (tb)...
A TB test checks if you’ve been exposed to the bacteria, while a TB shot is a vaccine meant to help prevent the disease. They serve completely different purposes—one diagnoses, the other protects.
In malaria fever the patient trampling feel cold and in dengue fever patient feels pain in all body , pain in joints and headache.
I'm not sure what drug is best known for preventing malaria, but you should know the difference between witch and which. Go back to 3rd grade.
Clinical malaria refers to the symptomatic presentation of malaria, which includes fever, chills, and other flu-like symptoms caused by the Plasmodium parasite. Severe malaria, on the other hand, is a critical condition characterized by life-threatening complications such as cerebral malaria, severe anemia, respiratory distress, or organ failure. While all cases of severe malaria are considered clinical malaria, not all clinical malaria cases progress to severe forms. Prompt diagnosis and treatment are essential to prevent progression to severe malaria.