To determine the appropriate antibiotics for a bacterial infection, healthcare providers typically conduct a culture and sensitivity test. This involves taking a sample from the infected area (like blood, urine, or tissue) and growing the bacteria in a laboratory. Once identified, various antibiotics are tested against the bacteria to see which ones effectively inhibit its growth. The results guide the selection of the most effective antibiotic for treatment.
So it can be properly treated; for example, if you think someone has a bacterial infection, you would treat that person with antibiotics. If that person actually has a viral infection, they should be receiving anti-virals, not antibiotics. Antibiotics have not affect on viruses.
Yes, because antibiotics are not effective on viruses. The Swine Flu (A-H1N1/09 virus) is unaffected by antibiotics and would still be transmissable. Antibiotics are usually only given to someone with a virus if they have already gotten or are considered to be at risk of getting a secondary bacterial infection along with the viral infection. Antibiotics are used to kill bacteria and treat bacterial infections.
AntiBiotics kill bacteria, not fungus. To kill Fungus, An Antifungal Would have to be used.
False. There is no cure yet for AIDS. Antibiotics work on bacteria. So if an AIDS patient gets a secondary bacterial infection, it would be appropriate for them to take antibiotics to help with the bacterial infection. AIDS is caused by the HIV virus, so antibiotics would be ineffective for treatment of the AIDS itself, just secondary infections associated with the AIDS. They are especially prone to these because of the lowered ability of AIDS patients' immune systems to fight disease.
Penicillin is an antibiotic that is effective against bacterial infections, not fungal infections. Fungal infections require antifungal medications, not antibiotics like penicillin, to effectively treat them. Using penicillin to treat a fungal infection will not be effective and could potentially worsen the infection by promoting the growth of the fungus.
Without antibiotics, bacterial infections could become more challenging to treat, leading to higher mortality rates for common infections. Surgery and cancer treatments may also be riskier due to the increased risk of infection. Overall, public health would likely suffer without the ability to effectively combat bacterial diseases.
No. The treatment is antibiotics and in this case you would really need it if you are pregnant. The infection going untreated would be worse. Speak to your doctor so they know.
Infected whiskers can look like pimples, in grown hairs, or inflamed. For bacterial infection antibiotics and changing their bowl they eat out of will help. A vet should be consulted if someone believes that their dog has a infected whisker.
Don't ever take an antibiotic to treat an ailment without consulting your doctor. Antibiotics only treat a few specific bacterium per antibiotic. By taking antibiotics for a type of bacterial infection that is resistant to that antibiotic, you only weaken the immune system making the infection harder to treat down the road. In addition, one of the side effects of doxycycline (Adoxa, Monodox), is "exacerbation of sinusitis symptoms". Check with your doctor. In a perfect world, doctors would never treat a bacterial infection without doing a culture to determine which antibiotics a bacterial infection is sensitive to. But this does not happen often enough.
It won't do anything to help or hurt the influenza, but it can treat or prevent a secondary bacterial infection if the doctor diagnoses, or anticipates, the development of a bacterial infection. Antibiotics are only effective on bacteria. Antiviral medications, like Tamiflu, are for treating influenza.
There are some instances where an animal may have a bacterial infection but not be running a fever; these would be times that a veterinarian may prescribe antibiotics for the animal. You should not give any animal antibiotics without consulting a veterinarian first - antibiotics have side effects and can cause medical emergencies if used improperly.
It is possible for a child to get a fever after being on an antibiotic for three days. There are several reasons. A few of those reasons are that the child could be sick with a virus and not a bacteria, in which case the antibiotic would be useless. Another scenario is that the bacteria is resistant to the particular antibiotic and that a different one is needed. In either case, you should follow up with the child's physician.