some Symptoms are Redness around the area where you have been scratched,pimples or bumps aruond the scratch,it takes longer to heal,Headache,Belly Ache,swollen limph nodes around the scratch, a high fever after you have been scratches there are many more but these are the most common. HOPE I HELPED -perryfan4ever
In 1793, there was a major epidemic in the US. However, yellow fever has been around for generations before that.
A choir that has been brought up from scratch- what it says on the tin really!
Children since they do not have a good immune system yet.
At nineteen months old, Helen Keller contracted a serious illness, believed to have been scarlet fever or meningitis. The disease left her deaf and blind.
No.
He died from a slow fever.
Yes, it is possible to catch scarlet fever from an infected person even if they are being treated. Scarlet fever is caused by the bacteria Streptococcus pyogenes, which can still be contagious during the early stages of treatment. However, once the infected individual has been on appropriate antibiotics for at least 24 hours, their risk of spreading the infection significantly decreases. Practicing good hygiene, such as handwashing and avoiding close contact, can help reduce the risk of transmission.
A fever by itself is not contagious. Fever is a generic symptom and sign that only says the body is fighting something. It is what is causing the fever that MAY be contagious.Contagious WITH fever as well:Measles, Mumps, Rubella (MMR vaccine has been controlling these)Strep, and MeningitisFlu, Bronchitis, Upper Respiratory Infection, viral or bacterialThe PlagueEbola virusAs just ONE example of a non-contagious problem that can produce fever:inflammation in the body, from ANY cause, such as cancer, which is never contagious
Yes
Scarlet fever only affects a small percentage of people and typically affects children. There have been 9,400 cases of scarlet fever since 1999.
A fever of unknown origin is a fever for which the cause has not yet been determined. If a patient has a red, sore throat with white exudate, swollen glands on the side of the neck, and a fever, the clinician may presume he knows that the origin of the fever is strep throat. If a patient has a fever without "localizing symptoms" -- that is, symptoms that point to a body part that's affected/infected -- it may be called a fever of unknown origin, or FUO.Fever of unknown origin (FUO) refers to the presence of a documented fever for a specified time, for which a cause has not been found after a basic medical evaluation.A fever of unknown origin is a fever for which the cause has not yet been determined. If a patient has a red, sore throat with white exudate, swollen glands on the side of the neck, and a fever, the clinician may presume he knows that the origin of the fever is strep throat. If a patient has a fever without "localizing symptoms" -- that is, symptoms that point to a body part that's affected/infected -- it may be called a fever of unknown origin, or FUO.