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Cholera, a severe form of bacterial dysentery, flourishes in regions where water is dirty and sanitation is poor.
Among his major discoveries, Wilks recognised ulcerative colitis in 1859, differentiating it from bacterial dysentery.
A highly communicable disease, cholera is a serious form of bacterial dysentery that results in vomiting and diarrhea and potentially fatal dehydration.
As a result, outbreaks of illnesses such as amoebic dysentery, bacterial dysentery, and hepatitis A occur frequently.
Fresh ginger is used for treating acute bacterial dysentery, baldness, malaria, poisonous snake bites, rheumatism, migraineheadache, and toothaches.
Diseases spread this way include schistosomiasis, brucellosis, hepatitis A, amoebic dysentery, bacterial dysentery, and giardia.
Reiter's syndrome was first described in 1916 by a German doctor who noticed that after an epidemic of bacterial dysentery, certain patients developed inflammations and very severe arthritis.
Cholera is a severe form of bacterial dysentery that can thrive under conditions of squalor and poor sanitation like those among the Rwandan refugees in Zaire.
Residents are subject to water- and food-borne illnesses such as typhoid, hepatitis, cholera, worms, amebiasis, giardia, cyclospora, and bacterial dysentery.
Nearly 800 people had sought help at hospitals in four southwest Russian provinces by late today after sanitation problems at a regional milk-processing factory apparently set off an outbreak of bacterial dysentery.
With correct treatment, most cases of amoebic and bacterial dysentery subside within ten days, and most individuals will achieve a full recovery within two to four weeks after beginning proper treatment.
Many villages have no access to running water, and even areas that do have it must contend with outbreaks of amoebic dysentery, bacterial dysentery, brucellosis, giardia, hepatitis A, and schistosomiasis.
He was able to acquire during this period an enormous experience on the pathology of infectious diseases (bacterial dysentery, typhus, typhoid fever, tularemia and malaria) as well as war-inflicted wounds, and performing more than four thousand autopsies.
The leaf is also used for treating respiratory tract infections, whooping cough, asthma, pulmonary tuberculosis, osteoarthritis, joint pain (rheumatism), acne, wounds, poorly healing ulcers, burns, bacterial dysentery, ringworms, liver and gallbladder problems, loss of appetite, and cancer.
BACTERIAL DYSENTERY: This is the 'fever' that commonly carries off those who drink canal-water; it is extremely resistant to penicillin, the most commonly available antibiotic for the canalers and canalsiders.