A 25-year-old man reported the lifetime history of upper respiratory infections occurring about twice a year. Three weeks ago he developed "influenza", turned yellow green and became difficult to cough, fever and chills, shortness of breath, mild chest pain. He saw a biomedical doctor diagnosed with acute asthmatic bronchitis and had taking 10 days of amoxicillin treatment and taking a salbutamol inhaler taken twice every 4 hours for 1 week It was. He seemed to cause agitation, tension, insomnia, so he discontinued taking the inhaler after 4 days; in addition, he no longer is out of breath.
Worldwide research by the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates that bathing in contaminated seawater causes about 250 million gastroenteritis and upper respiratory tract disease annually. Many studies have shown that increased respiratory and intestinal diseases and bathing infections are a direct result of increased GESAMP (2001) water pollution. According to Shuval 2003, the estimated global economic loss caused by pathogenic microorganisms is about 12 billion dollars per year. Fisheries contaminated with harmful algae cause serious health problems Studies conducted by the European Environment Agency (EEA 2005) show that the socio-economic impacts of Greece, Italy and Spain are approximately 329 million per year It has been shown that.
The purpose of this article is to introduce and educate readers about the mechanisms constituting respiratory diseases called tuberculosis. This article discusses history, research, and how it affects human health and happiness of its environment. The purpose of this study was to investigate and consider epidemiological triads related to this respiratory infection, symptoms, diagnostic tests, isolation, treatment, hypothesis, investigation, monitoring and eradication of Koch.
In this article we will discuss the pathophysiology, management, and psychosocial aspects of lower respiratory tract infections in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). These are case studies related discussions through detailed interviews with patients and her medical records. A 66-year-old female DK suffering from COPD asked A & E to complain about shortness of breath (Sob) during a break. She had a two-day history of SOB worsening and a cough to cause jaundice. Her exercise capacity has been reduced from 1 mile to several yards on the plane. Her husband recently suffered from upper respiratory tract infection. She has chest pain, swollen ankle joints, hemoptysis or weight loss, and no recent hospitalization.