Sunday, January 10, 2010

What is the Connection? - Fatty Liver and Tiredness

By Veronica Carrillo

It's hard to say for sure how many Americans are infected by cryptosporidium per year. This is so because many are infected without consulting a doctor and because the cysts are so hard to detect in the laboratory. A small quantity of cysts in water can be hard to find in a laboratory. Yet a small number of cysts can infect the person who drinks them.

Scarlet fever is a tricky condition to diagnose because at first, it appears as strep throat would, with a fever and a sore throat. However, 1-2 days after the fever begins (usually 101 degrees or more) a reddish rash should begin to appear on the neck and chest, later spreading across the body and sometimes to the face as well.

The good news is that there are all-natural remedy courses that over time have been confirmed to be incredibly successful at ending your pain immediately, as well as permanently. Once this happens, it means that acid, food and other digestive juices from your stomach are no longer being refluxed back up your esophagus.

Your stomach has a lining of mucus that protects it from the damaging affects of acid. Your esophagus, which is the tube that stretches from the back of your throat to your stomach, does not have this same protection.

Why Is The Cryptosporidium Cyst So Hard To "Search and Destroy"? The cysts are so small that they are difficult to find even under a microscope. They are particularly hard to find in water where it takes only a relatively few cysts to infect a person. The Environmental Protection Agency set new standard for this parasite to be met by 2001, for water systems serving the majority of U.S. populations (those serving surface water to 10,000 or more). The new standard says that the parasite should be totally disinfected (killed) or removed by filter from the water. Water treatment systems are required to report the presence of cysts in your tap water.

Upon beginning to take the course of antibiotics, the fever should begin to fade after a couple of days and the sore throat should subside quickly. The skin around the area affected by the rash will begin to peel off 3-4 days after the rash's appearance and may continue peeling for 10 days, but the rash itself may not go away fully for up to 2-3 weeks. People infected will no longer be contagious 24 hours after they begin taking antibiotics, but until then, it is highly contagious. If you should develop new symptoms or there does not appear to be an affect after taking antibiotics for 24 hours, you should contact your doctor immediately because there may be a new infection that needs treatment.

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