Sentences with phrase «potentially fatal illnesses»

Regardless of how well their bodies can handle changes in weather, they are all vulnerable to being hit by cars, being attacked by other animals, or contracting potentially fatal illnesses.
Vaccines protect your puppy and other dogs from potentially fatal illnesses.
Next, you share the blog on Facebook with an eye - catching statistic about potentially fatal illnesses that can arise if a dog isn't spayed or neutered.
Your puppy will need a number of vaccinations and medications to stay healthy and avoid potentially fatal illnesses that can be caught from other dogs.
«Honey can contain spores of a bacterium called Clostridium botulinum, which can germinate in a baby's immature digestive system and cause infant botulism, a rare but potentially fatal illness
Never give your baby aspirin, as it makes her more susceptible to Reye's syndrome, a rare but potentially fatal illness.
Honey can contain spores of a bacterium called Clostridium botulinum, which can germinate in a baby's immature digestive system and cause infant botulism, a rare but potentially fatal illness.
Nusinersen (Spinraza) will be used to treat young children with a severe and potentially fatal illness called spinal muscular atrophy (SMA)...
Have you tested positive for sexually transmitted diseases or are you undergoing treatment for a potentially fatal illness?
Even then, Fogelman doesn't trust his characters (or his audience) quite enough to bypass such creaky contrivances as a potentially fatal illness for one character and, for Danny himself, a drug - and - alcohol addiction that the movie flicks on and off like a light switch whenever it's convenient.
While the risk of bloat can not be completely eliminated, a responsible pet owner can go a long way to protect their beloved pet from this potentially fatal illness.
Without being properly vaccinated, your pet could develop a dangerous, potentially fatal illness.
But the good news is that the American Heartworm Society (AHS) has updated guidelines so veterinarians can readily educate pet owners about this potentially fatal illness.
This in turn means greater exposure to the insects and greater risk of contracting the potentially fatal illness.

Not exact matches

It is usually not fatal, but in areas where there is more than one serotype circulating, it is more likely to produce a severe, potentially life - threatening illness.
According to Wilson, monoclonal antibodies from (deliberately infected) animals were routinely used in the first half of the 20th century to try to treat diphtheria (an upper - respiratory illness that killed roughly 15,000 people annually in the early 1920s until a vaccine was formulated against it in 1924) and tetanus (a potentially fatal infection also known as lockjaw, because one of the muscles it destroys is in the jaw).
- Contracting potentially fatal diseases (feline leukemia, distemper) or illnesses they can pass on to humans (rabies, toxoplasmosis).
An estimated 60 percent of the pets displaced by Hurricane Katrina are likely infested with heartworm, a potentially fatal, mosquito - borne illness.
The 2009 EPA endangerment findings took into account the public health implications of a warming climate caused by an increase in greenhouse gas emissions, which include more deaths from heat - related illnesses, more serious (and potentially fatal) respiratory illnesses, and more people at risk from catastrophic flooding.
Often, fluoroquinolones are not prescribed correctly and are used to treat bronchitis, sinusitis, earaches, and other illnesses that don't require such strong medications instead of combatting more potentially fatal bacterial infections.
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