Viruses cause a damage when they transport into other animals or humans. You can get viruses from people who are snizzing, or even kissing you. Also, viruses can go to your lungs and do the damage.
When a virus or bacteria enters the body, it can damage cells and tissues through various mechanisms. Viruses invade host cells, hijack their machinery to replicate, and sometimes cause cell death. Bacteria can release toxins that harm host cells or trigger an immune response leading to inflammation and tissue damage. Both can result in symptoms like fever, cough, fatigue, and more severe consequences depending on the extent of damage.
No. They are bacteria. Viruses are non-living particles. They make you sick by landing on a living cell, reproducing using the cell, and then destroying the cell. The new viruses do the same. Bacteria are living single-celled organisms. The few that make you sick (about 1/15 of bacteria are pathogenic, meaning make you sick) make you sick by taking the nutrients out of other living cells. So, technically, since bacteria and viruses are completely different things, I don't think there's a such thing as a bacterial virus as one organism
the bacteria makes you sick.
Pathogens. These are typically bacteria, viruses, fungi, or parasites that can cause disease by invading the body's tissues. Common examples include influenza viruses, E. coli bacteria, and malaria parasites.
No. A fetus develops inside the amniotic sac. Its genetic material comes from the egg and sperm which do not give it bacteria. Only during birth, when the sac is broken and the baby emerges does it encounter bacteria.
you can get sick, you have bacteria, you can get a virus,
Even if you don't want to get sick, you can't control getting sick. You get sick because a virus or bacteria happens to evade or resist your immune system, and your immune system cannot be controlled, so you get sick because your body temporarily doesn't have the ability to abolish the bacteria or virus that is in your body.
When a virus or bacteria enters the body, it can damage cells and tissues through various mechanisms. Viruses invade host cells, hijack their machinery to replicate, and sometimes cause cell death. Bacteria can release toxins that harm host cells or trigger an immune response leading to inflammation and tissue damage. Both can result in symptoms like fever, cough, fatigue, and more severe consequences depending on the extent of damage.
If someone was to come in contact with a virus or bacteria that makes them sick this can develop overnight during sleep.
Sick, bedridden, under the weather, infected (with a virus or bacteria).
No. They are bacteria. Viruses are non-living particles. They make you sick by landing on a living cell, reproducing using the cell, and then destroying the cell. The new viruses do the same. Bacteria are living single-celled organisms. The few that make you sick (about 1/15 of bacteria are pathogenic, meaning make you sick) make you sick by taking the nutrients out of other living cells. So, technically, since bacteria and viruses are completely different things, I don't think there's a such thing as a bacterial virus as one organism
No. They are bacteria. Viruses are non-living particles. They make you sick by landing on a living cell, reproducing using the cell, and then destroying the cell. The new viruses do the same. Bacteria are living single-celled organisms. The few that make you sick (about 1/15 of bacteria are pathogenic, meaning make you sick) make you sick by taking the nutrients out of other living cells. So, technically, since bacteria and viruses are completely different things, I don't think there's a such thing as a bacterial virus as one organism
Yes, exposure to bad smells can sometimes cause symptoms like nausea, headaches, or respiratory issues, but it is not the same as getting sick from a virus or bacteria.
The simple way to tell if you're sick with a bacteria - virus - allergy - poison or other illness is to go for examination at the doctor's office
No, there is no live bacteria in flu shots. Flu shots are to prevent the flu which is caused by a virus, not bacteria. The various flu vaccines contain pieces of viruses that are treated to be able to give you immunization, but not make you sick from the virus contained in the vaccination. The flu shots contain inert ("dead") viruses or pieces of viruses instead of whole particles. The flu mist used in the nasal vaccination is made with active ("live") but weakened viruses that can not make you sick if you have an otherwise healthy body and immune system.
after people started getting sick and when the microscope was made they chose meat to see what the problem was and they found bacteria
well, it depends on the virus itself. If you understand how viruses replicate themselves then you can understand how long they will take to make you sick. Typically things that make you sick to your stomach are bacteria that you may ingest from eating food, drinking water, etc. Bacteria can multiply about very 20 minutes. If you ingest say one bacteria cell, the number of cells will double exponentially every 20 minutes. So say after 8 hours you could have 1000000000000000000000000 bacteria cells in your stomach. At this point your body may start responding and you start puking or other bodily changes start to take place to get rid of the bacteria. these bodily changes can make you sick. If it is a virus that you are infected with then it could take hours to years to make you sick. Virus replicate themselves in your body differently than bacteria do, so they could lay dormant for a long time and not replicate for years, or replicate very quickly and make you sick within a matter of hours. If you are really sick to your stomach, chances are it is probably a bacterial infection and you could go to your doctor and have them check your stool as you may have a bacteria infection that goes dormant for a while, and could make you sick every couple of weeks.