Name the diseases that found both in humans and animals?☺️
Answers
Answer:
fever and so many disease
Answer:
Rabies. This disease is familiar to Iowans and it causes great fear because rabies is always fatal once symptoms begin. The last human death from rabies in Iowa was in 1951, caused by rabid dogs. Increased public awareness, mandatory rabies vaccination of dogs, and control of stray dogs by enforcement of leash laws, significantly have reduced the risk of rabies.
The greatest risks of rabies today follow cat and skunk bites, and oral examination of salivating cattle by farmers and veterinarians. Anywhere from 15 to 50 or more people need post-exposure rabies treatment each year in Iowa.
Tuberculosis and brucellosis. Thanks to the cooperation of Iowa farmers, the organisms in animals that contribute to these diseases in humans have been almost eliminated from Iowa livestock. The organisms are killed by cooking and pasteurization of milk.
Trichinosis. Once a common human disease in the United States, trichinosis is transmitted by infected pork and the meat of some undercooked wild game. It has virtually disappeared because farmers have participated in a program to cook all garbage and pork trimmings fed to their pigs. Without cooking, these wastes would cause trichina infection in pigs and produce disease in humans who eat under-cooked pork.
Ringworm. This disease is a fungal infection of the skin on both humans and animals. It is transmitted easily by direct contact.
Giardiasis. Giardia is a water-borne protozoan, a microscopic, single-celled animal that infects the gut of both animals and humans. It is passed in the feces and can be carried in contaminated water. Giardiasis can cause severe gastroenteritis with fever, nausea, and abdominal pain, which may persist for several days or more.
Lyme disease. This zoonotic disease is mentioned because it is a much talked and written about disease, even though few human cases have been reported in Iowa. Lyme disease in people and animals usually is seen as an arthritis, but may cause heart irregularities and neuralgic problems such as headaches, dizziness, and facial paralysis. The signs may begin soon after infection, become chronic, or be delayed for months or even years.
Lyme disease is caused by a spiral-shaped bacterium similar to that of leptospirosis and syphilis, and is transmitted by deer ticks. Dogs, horses, cattle, deer, and other animals are susceptible to Lyme disease.