Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.
Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.
What are synonym of calcarea phosphoricum?
Phosphate of Lime. Tricalcic Phosphate. Ca3 2PO4. A mixture of the basic and other phosphates of lime, made by dropping dilute phosphoric acid into lime water. Trituration.
Phosphate of Lime. Tricalcic Phosphate. Ca3 2PO4.
See lessA mixture of the basic and other phosphates of lime, made by dropping dilute phosphoric acid into lime water. Trituration.
What are the headache symptoms of calcarea phosphoricum?
1. Headache < from the change of weather extending from forehead to nose; from temples to jaws; with some rheumatic feeling from collar-bone to wrists. 2. Vertigo, with nausea. 3. Head compressed, heavy, and painful, on waking in the morning. 4. Painful sensation of fulness in the head, as if theRead more
1. Headache < from the change of weather extending from forehead to nose; from temples to jaws; with some rheumatic feeling from collar-bone to wrists.
See less2. Vertigo, with nausea.
3. Head compressed, heavy, and painful, on waking in the morning.
4. Painful sensation of fulness in the head, as if the brain were pressed against the cranium, by lying still.
5. Headache with a craving for tobacco smoke, which >.
6. During the headache, face and head hot with indolence and ill-humor.
7. The headache is < in the open air, or on stooping.
8. Headache on vertex, behind ears, withdrawing in muscles of the neck to nape and occiput.
9. Headache, with flatulency in the abdomen.
10. Headache of school-girls with diarrhœa.
What are the symptoms of calcarea phosphoricum in Gastrointestinal system?
Appetite: 1. Unusual hunger at 4 p.m. 2. Infant wants to nurse all the time. 3. Craves fat bacon salt meats. 4. Desire for tobacco smoke; smoking > headache. 5. Complete loss of appetite before and during catamenia. 6. Colic and diarrhœa from ice creams; juicy fruit or cider; every attempt to eatRead more
Appetite:
1. Unusual hunger at 4 p.m.
2. Infant wants to nurse all the time.
3. Craves fat bacon salt meats.
4. Desire for tobacco smoke; smoking > headache.
5. Complete loss of appetite before and during catamenia.
6. Colic and diarrhœa from ice creams; juicy fruit or cider; every attempt to eat; drinking cold water (colic or diarrhœa).
Stomach:
1. Nausea, with vertigo, the perplexity of the head, and confusion of ideas.
2. After taking coffee, nausea, pyrosis, head confusion and pain, and excessive ill-humor.
3. Heartburn and water-brash.
4. Sour rising.
5. Acute pains in the stomach, with great weakness, headache, and diarrhœa; the least morsel that is eaten renews the pains in the stomach.
6. After belching, burning in epigastrium.
7. Empty, sinking sensation (at the epigastrium); 7 p.m.
8. Persistent vomiting of milk, whether of breast or other.
9. Vomiting from hawking phlegm.
10. Easy vomiting in children.
Abdomen:
1. Aching soreness and pain around navel; > after fetid flatus passes off.
2. Oozing of bloody fluid from the navel of infants.
3. Violent colic with inflation of the abdomen, and great accumulation of flatulency, or headache.
4. Difficult escape of wind, without mitigation of suffering.
5. Burning in the abdomen.
6. Aching soreness, cutting, drawing in l. groin, later in r.
7. Burning aching in groins.
8. Abdominal weakness in anæmic patients.
Stool and Anus:
See less1. Evacuations with much flatulency.
2. Stools in which there were many small white points or flakes, like pus, scarcely perceptible.
3. Offensive pus with stools.
4. Daily watery, very hot stools.
5. Stools green and loose, sometimes slimy.
6. Diarrhœa, very fetid.
7. Offensive flatus.
8. Cutting, pinching, sharp colic, followed by diarrhœa.
9. Diarrhœa from juicy fruit or cider; from vexation.
10. Diarrhœa of dentition.
11. Hard stools, with mental depression.
12. Hard stools with much blood.
13. After stool, buzzing in ears; weak feeling in male sexual organs.
14. Bleeding after stool; protruding piles, aching, itching, sore; oozing of yellow fluid and bleeding.
What are the different species of treponema?
Three subspecies of T. pallidum are known: Treponema pallidum pallidum, which causes syphilis T. p. endemicum, which causes bejel or endemic syphilis T. p. pertenue, which causes yaws
Three subspecies of T. pallidum are known:
See lessTreponema pallidum pallidum, which causes syphilis
T. p. endemicum, which causes bejel or endemic syphilis
T. p. pertenue, which causes yaws
What are the different stages of syphilis?
Here’s a rundown of the stages of syphilis, with the usual symptoms and potential for complications of each stage. Primary stage: Early in the infection, a painless sore, called a chancre, crops up wherever the bacteria first entered your body. A chancre may be visible or hidden inside your mouth, vRead more
Here’s a rundown of the stages of syphilis, with the usual symptoms and potential for complications of each stage.
Primary stage: Early in the infection, a painless sore, called a chancre, crops up wherever the bacteria first entered your body. A chancre may be visible or hidden inside your mouth, vagina, cervix, anus, or elsewhere. These initial chancres usually heal within a month or two.
Secondary stage: Widespread rashes often occur in secondary syphilis and last about two to six weeks. This stage can also involve symptoms that mimic other common conditions, including the flu, psoriasis, and hemorrhoids. Secondary-stage symptoms go away on their own, yet the infection lingers.
Extreme complications during the primary and secondary stages are rare but do sometimes occur. For instance, while severe damage to the heart and blood vessels usually occurs in the last stage of syphilis, such damage can also occur early in the illness. Doctors have seen people with early-stage syphilis who needed valve replacement and coronary bypass operations.
Latent stage: This symptom-free stage may last for a few years or for the rest of your life. In those who receive no treatment, about one-third of such cases progress to late, or tertiary, syphilis, during which many severe complications can occur.
Late, or tertiary, syphilis: The late stage of syphilis is when the most severe complications usually arise. Here’s a partial list:
Gummas Small bumps or tumors called gummas can arise on your skin, bones, liver, or any other organ, including the stomach and eyes. Gummas often arise in the palate and the structures of the nose. Other common sites include the face, scalp, trunk, and legs.
See lessNeurological problems Syphilis can cause many nervous system problems, including sudden, searing pains. These spasms of pain may occur in various organs, often the stomach, and they may cause vomiting. Extreme, lightning-like pains in your rectum, bladder, and larynx may also occur. Syphilis can also cause the loss of sensation and of responsiveness to temperature changes. Visual problems or blindness, meningitis (inflammation of the brain), and stroke may occur. Nervous system damage can also cause incontinence and impotence in men.
Cardiovascular problems These usually arise between 10 and 25 years after the initial syphilis infection. They may include inflammation and bulging of the aorta, the body’s main artery. Syphilis may also attack other blood vessels and heart valves.
Pituitary gland involvement Rarely, syphilis can cause hypopituitarism, in which the pituitary gland secretes reduced amounts of hormones. In adults, this can cause premature aging, among other issues, and in children, dwarfism.
Heightened risk for HIV infection Sores caused by syphilis provides an easy path into the body for HIV. As a result, both men and women with syphilis have a risk of contracting HIV that is about two to five times higher than in adults who don’t have syphilis.
Gastric syphilis This relatively rare complication, affecting the stomach, usually strikes people in their twenties to forties. It can cause pain, loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting, and weight loss.
Pregnancy and childbirth complications If you have syphilis while pregnant, you can pass it on to your child. Infected infants are at risk of being born with or developing many deformities. Syphilis during pregnancy greatly raises the risk of miscarriage or stillbirth, and infants who acquire syphilis from their mothers are at serious risk for dying during or shortly after birth.
What are the complication of syphilis?
Heart disease Nervous system disorders Mental disorders Blindness Aortic aneurysms Pregnancy Complications If you have syphilis and are pregnant, you can pass it on to your unborn child. You might also have a higher risk of miscarriage, stillbirth (your baby being born dead), or your newborn dying wRead more
Heart disease
See lessNervous system disorders
Mental disorders
Blindness
Aortic aneurysms
Pregnancy Complications
If you have syphilis and are pregnant, you can pass it on to your unborn child. You might also have a higher risk of miscarriage, stillbirth (your baby being born dead), or your newborn dying within a few days.
Untreated babies who are born with syphilis can also have problems with their bones, blood, liver, spleen, brain, and skin. It may also cause blindness, seizures, developmental delays, and deafness.
Increased HIV risk
If you have syphilis, you’re up to 5 times more likely to get HIV. That’s because syphilis sores can be open, making it easy for HIV to get into your body while you’re having sex.
Gummas
These are small bumps of dead tissue and fiber. They can form throughout your body if you don’t get treated. You can get them in your internal organs and on bones or skin in the late stages. They typically go away with treatment.
Neurological Problems
If it’s not treated, syphilis can cause problems with your nervous system. Symptoms include:
Severe headache
Stroke
Loss of muscle coordination
Paralysis or inability to move part of your body
Numbness
A mental disorder called dementia
Blindness or changes to vision
Which are the non capsulated bacteria?
Non-capsulated bacteria are bacteria that lack a capsule. A capsule is a protective outer covering on certain gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria that increases virulence. The capsule acts to prevent desiccation and phagocytosis. Bacteria without a capsule, or non-capsulated bacteria, include NRead more
Non-capsulated bacteria are bacteria that lack a capsule. A capsule is a protective outer covering on certain gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria that increases virulence. The capsule acts to prevent desiccation and phagocytosis. Bacteria without a capsule, or non-capsulated bacteria, include Neisseria, Corynebacterium, Salmonella, Shigella, Vibrio, Proteus, Pseudomonas.
See lessWhich are the capsulated Bacteria?
The capsule is found most commonly among gram-negative bacteria: Escherichia coli (in some strains) Neisseria meningitidis Klebsiella pneumoniae Haemophilus influenzae Pseudomonas aeruginosa Salmonella However, some gram-positive bacteria may also have a capsule: Bacillus megaterium for example, synRead more
The capsule is found most commonly among gram-negative bacteria:
Escherichia coli (in some strains)
Neisseria meningitidis
Klebsiella pneumoniae
Haemophilus influenzae
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
Salmonella
However, some gram-positive bacteria may also have a capsule:
Bacillus megaterium for example, synthesizes a capsule composed of polypeptide and polysaccharides.
See lessBacillus anthracis
Streptococcus pyogenes synthesizes a hyaluronic acid capsule.
Streptococcus pneumoniae has at least 91 different capsular serotypes. These serotypes are the basis for the pneumococcal vaccines.
Streptococcus agalactiae produces a polysaccharide capsule of nine antigenic types that all contain sialic acid (Ia, Ib, II, III, IV, V, VI, VII, VIII).
Staphylococcus epidermidis
Staphylococcus aureus
Which are the gram negative bacteria?
Gram-negative bacteria are bacteria that do not retain the crystal violet stain used in the gram-staining method of bacterial differentiation.
Gram-negative bacteria are bacteria that do not retain the crystal violet stain used in the gram-staining method of bacterial differentiation.
See lessWhich are the gram positive bacteria?
In bacteriology, gram-positive bacteria are bacteria that give a positive result in the Gram stain test, which is traditionally used to quickly classify bacteria into two broad categories according to their type of cell wall.
In bacteriology, gram-positive bacteria are bacteria that give a positive result in the Gram stain test, which is traditionally used to quickly classify bacteria into two broad categories according to their type of cell wall.
See less