Sentences with phrase «disease gains a foothold»

But a new method has the potential to spot telltale signs early, before a disease gains a foothold.
However, when a genetic disease gains a foothold in a breed, the carrier prevalence can become quite high, and the disease is in no way rare for that breed of dog.

Not exact matches

Even though southern Asia has all the prerequisites for yellow fever — monkeys, mosquitoes, a warm climate — the disease has never gained a foothold on the world's most populous continent.
Because the tiger population lives split into small groups, deadly diseases should theoretically have trouble gaining a foothold.
These probiotic strains have demonstrated the ability to neutralize dietary toxins and carcinogens by both lowering the pH of the colon and attaching tightly to the intestinal lining so that no disease - producing pathogens can gain a foothold.
Healthy bacteria (also known as microflora or probiotics) live symbiotically in your body and help eliminate the bad bacteria that are always trying to gain a foothold — the ones that cause all manner of disease and illness.
It's those trillions of healthy bacteria (also known as microflora or probiotics) living symbiotically in you that help eliminate the bad bacteria that are always trying to gain a foothold — the ones that cause all manner of disease and illness.
By preventing diseases such as urinary stones from gaining a foothold, we save our pets from discomfort and a potentially life - threatening health crisis, and ourselves from costly veterinary medical bills.
For botanical invaders, such as kudzu and another ornamental plant from Asia called Oriental bittersweet (Celastrus orbiculatus), and insect invaders, as well the diseases they may carry, climate warming associated with increases in atmospheric carbon will likely allow these species to gain footholds in habitats formerly off - limits to them.
Global warming could also create conditions favourable for a return of malaria to the UK, where it was once endemic in Kent, although the disease was very unlikely to gain a foothold,» said Prof Paul Hunter of the University of East Anglia in Norwich.
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