Yes, certain viruses can be engineered to serve as medicines, particularly in the field of gene therapy and oncolytic virotherapy. Oncolytic viruses are designed to selectively target and kill cancer cells while sparing healthy tissue. Additionally, viral vectors can be used to deliver therapeutic genes into patients' cells to treat genetic disorders. This innovative approach harnesses the natural properties of viruses for beneficial medical applications.
anti virus
Antibiotic medicine
A cold virus can typical live for a day in a medicine bottle. This virus cannot last longer than this without a host.
Antivirals are used to treat viruses.
For prevention of a virus, you need a vaccine for that specific strain of virus. There are some circumstances when an anti-viral medicine may be given prophylactically (for prevention), but medical professionals need to evaluate the risks and benefits of preventive use, as well as the timing of the intervention.
Yes. The virus learns to adapt against medicine and learns to become more infective.
Antiviral medications work by inhibiting the virus's ability to replicate within the body. These drugs target specific steps in the virus's life cycle, such as viral entry, replication, or release. By preventing the virus from replicating, the infection is contained, allowing the immune system to eliminate the virus from the body.
Not effectively. Allergy medicine blocks histamine receptors, but a cold is caused by a virus: completely unrelated.
Epstein barr is a virus, not a medicine
Rubella is not a virus, it is a contagious viral infection caused by the rubella virus.
its because of the virus from the mechanical medicine made by Dr.Gomba!
no