A cold and the flu are caused by a viral infection.
virus infection
The correct spelling is "staph infection." "Staph" is shorthand for staphylococcus, a kind of bacteria.
Bacteria come in many shapes and sizes, and they can cause a lot of many diseases and colds. It depends in the severity of the bacteria, how many bacteria there are, and what kind of bacteria they are. Bacteria can cause from salmonella to the simple cold. Ecoli, a type of bacteria found in untreated water, can cause you to be throwing up for months at a time.
dysentery
The tree and grasshopper that share the same name are both called "locust." This can sometimes cause confusion, as the word "locust" refers to both a type of tree in the pea family and a type of grasshopper known for their swarming behavior.
Mostly used for colds and flew when you are sick, depending on your situation
throat infection.
virus infection
Yes.any kind of injection can result in an infection if the injection site is not properly cleaned.
It usually is inside women cells
what kind of infection can cause a swollen lymph node in the left breast
Unless it is an emergency, you should not have any kind of surgery with any kind of infection. Talk to the doctor about getting the tooth infection and perhaps even the cause of the infection, cleared up before scheduling your hysterectomy. If the surgery needs to be done immediately, it is important the doctor know about the tooth infection prior to the surgery.
Bilateral means the patient has the infection in both lungs.
Any kind of stress can make you more susceptible to infection. If you get cold and wet, especially during physical excercise, that's stress. If your asthma flares up, that's stress. But none of these actually give you a cold; they just make it easier to get one. Colds and Flu are typically a virus, but occassionaly misdiagnosed bacteria get called a "cold" too. Most commonly, you get these from contact with other people who have colds.
Viral Infection
Any kind of infection you could get from any other kind of scratch.Cat scratches are particularly likely to cause (duh!) "cat scratch disease". It's caused by bacteria in the genus Bartonella and is usually fairly benign, clearing up in a couple of weeks with no treatment needed.
Usually a viral infection of the liver.