Sentences with phrase «dysentery for»

Not exact matches

When struck with dysentery, he nurses himself through the fever and relies for healing on his crop of melons and pumpkins.
For 33 years, Floating Hospital was located on two successive vessels helping children and educating mothers about dysentery and other important health issues.
Antibiotics should be used only for dysentery or suspected cholera.
Media commitments — and the on - going effects of a bout of dysentery — meant he joined for the last kilometre, but the non-running media pack weren't disappointed.
Islamic traders introduced opium to China in the ninth century, and it was used for the next 800 years for the treatment of diarrhea resulting from dysentery.
Concurrent infections of typhoid and Shigella dysentery have complicated tracking the outbreak, according to Pierre Rollin, a virologist with the Centers for Disease Control, which responded to the outbreak, along with the local ministry of health, the WHO, the Public Health Agency of Canada, and Doctors Without Borders.
So we looked at endoparasites; these are parasitic worms and single - cell parasites that cause dysentery, for example, and looked at all the archaeological evidence for these right across the Roman Empire compared with the evidence in the Bronze and Iron Age, but before the Roman Empire.
The findings hint that the protozoa responsible for toxoplasmosis, amoebic dysentery, malaria, and other diseases may also insinuate themselves into human genes.
However, new archaeological research has revealed that — for all their apparently hygienic innovations — intestinal parasites such as whipworm, roundworm and Entamoeba histolytica dysentery did not decrease as expected in Roman times compared with the preceding Iron Age, they gradually increased.
July 26, 2017 - It all started for Mariana Lanzarini - Lopes as an undergraduate, cracking coconuts in the West Indies, seeing the effects of dysentery while working in a hospital in Africa and engineering a solar - powered refrigerator to keep medicine safe in Indian villages.
But for now, let's just hope he doesn't get dysentery in exchange for his brave act.
Has been used for diarrhea, dysentery, colds and other viruses..
For asthma, chronic bronchitis, whooping - cough, and dysentery.
You think this dysentery is normal and par for the course, still?
Baobab fruit has been eaten by traditional cultures all over the world for thousands of years as a daily food, and medicinally in greater amounts to reduce acute dysentery, as well as chronic diarrhea and constipation.
Due to its antiseptic, anti-inflammatory, and astringent properties, pomegranate haven been traditionally used for alleviating diarrhea, dysentery, cholera, upset stomach, and hemorrhoids, as well as for eliminating intestinal parasites.
Pau d'Arco (Tabebuia avellanedae) known also as Ipe Roxo, Lapacho, or Taheebo is a tree native to South America, where it has been traditionally used for a very long time to treat a wide range of health problems, including candida overgrowth or candidiasis (including vaginal and oral yeast infection), various types of cancer, infections, gastric ulcers, skin conditions, pain, arthritis, fever, inflammation of the prostate gland (prostatitis), dysentery, skin ulcers, leukaemia, respiratory infections (cold, flu, bronchitis, sinusitis, etc.), herpes simplex virus, bacterial infections including cystitis, etc..
For centuries, cultures around the world have used all parts of the tree - roots, bark, flowers, peel, seed and seed oil - medicinally to treat a range of health concerns, from digestive disorders and dysentery, to fever and heart ailments.
She fought in several battles until contracting dysentery, and died in June 1864 after battling the illness for several weeks.
Hospital costs are generally inexpensive for common problems [dysentery, diarrhea] and minor treatments such as stitches.
The amount of pathogens that can dwell in that sludge is mind - boggling: those responsible for hepatitis A and B, cholera, campylobacter, dysentery, and salmonella, plus intestinal worms that you don't even have to ingest to get sick — you can inhale them.
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