Overview of Polio The purpose of this paper is to identify polio, an epidemic disease worldwide for fecal infections, discuss medical interventions to suppress and eliminate disease outbreaks, and examine ethical dilemmas. Polio pathogens are intestinal viruses spread through fecal matter via poliovirus, feces. Breathing occurs, the virus first grows in the oropharynx and then invades the gastrointestinal tract. It can spread through fecal canal, airborne, floating floating processes and asymptomatic carriers.
Polio virus is the cause of polio. Sore throat, fever, nausea, constipation, diarrhea, sometimes sputum are the symptoms of polio. Vaccines can be used for this disease. Gastroenteritis is caused by a variety of viruses including rotavirus, adenovirus, mineralized virus and norovirus. Symptoms of gastroenteritis are vomiting, headache, and fever. Symptoms will appear in 1 to 2 days after infection. The disease of infants, young children, disabled people is dangerous.
Polio, also called polio, is a disease caused by a viral infection that affects the body, such as muscles and nerves. In severe cases, permanent paralysis, loss of muscle movement, or death may result. Polio is an infection caused by poliovirus infection. Viral spread is caused by direct contact with humans, contact with infected secretions from the nose and mouth, or exposure to infected feces. The virus enters from the nose and mouth, grows in the throat and intestines, and is absorbed and diffused through the blood and lymphatic system. The lymphatic system is the main part of the body's immune system; that is why it has such a big impact on the body. These are all 5 to 35 days, occurring on average 7 to 14 days.
Polio comes from Greek gray and bone marrow, refers to the spinal cord, and is a common name for inflammation, inflammation suffix, polio. The shortened polio becomes polio. For a while, polio was called baby sputum, but not only young people. Paralytic polio: Usually the first signs of paralytic polio after the early stages of virus like symptoms begin with surface reflexes and loss of muscle pain or spasm. Usually is asymmetric. Less than 1-2% of polio patients are paralyzed. In most cases of paralytic polio, the patient is fully recovered. However, for a certain number of people, paralysis or muscle weakness still exists.