10, 12, 13 Vomiting and fever are infrequent, and the stools tend to be watery, yellow-green in color, and usually without mucus, pus, or blood. Early signs, such as failure to gain weight or a slight weight loss and abdominal distention, may be subtle. The disease may progress to ...
Campylobacter, according to CDC data, is the number one cause of food-borne disease in the United States. Shigella spp contaminates food and water and causes dysentery (severe diarrhea often containing mucus and blood). Salmonella infections often occur because of poorly or undercooked cooked and/...
They were "rediscovered" in 1983 when they were reported to cause of peptic ulceration in humans. Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic curved spiral gram negative organism with 4 flagella. The bacterium lives in gastric mucus, can attach to epithelial c...
PREVIEW DECAYKE #3: With links to the work and websites of humans and mutants I will be featuring in our next full-blownout issue. While these interviews are about as set in stone as can possibly be, there’s always the chance that there will be more or that I’ll add a few contr...
If your dog’s vomit is slimy or mucus-like it might be because they’ve been drooling excessively and the drool has then pooled in their stomach. Typically this will look clear in appearance. This can be indicative of a major irritation, so if the slimy vomit persists, you should cons...
and sloughing of respiratory mucosa forming mucus plugs in the lower airways. DA can produce these effects, and it leads to death if exposure occurs in unventilated and confined spaces (Ochi et al., 2004). Studies byIshi et al. (2004)postulated that metabolic by-products of DA and DC, ...
Infections:Just like with humans, viral, bacterial, and parasitic infections can make your dog sick, causing vomiting. Toxins:Many householdtoxins, like chemicals incleaning supplies, medications, toxic plants, or certain foods (likechocolate), can make your dog sick. ...
They were "rediscovered" in 1983 when they were reported to cause of peptic ulceration in humans. Helicobacter pylori is a microaerophilic curved spiral gram negative organism with 4 flagella. The bacterium lives in gastric mucus, can attach to epithelial cells, and may penetrate intercellular...