Warning to kill mosquitoes on the skin!!!!
U.S. medical study warned that the killing of mosquitoes in and stood on the human skin.
The study, published in the Journal England of Medicine, that the killing of mosquitoes in and stood on the human skin can be infected with human infection.
And The study, prepared by the doctors from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, after the death of a woman in the seventh and fifty-year-old after suffering from fungal infection in the muscles.
And doctors believed she became infected after killing a mosquito was standing on her body, causing that part of the insect enters the skin and infect infection.
And hit this fungal infection doctors puzzled. Not only because they are not found only in mosquitoes and other insects. But are found in the saliva of mosquitoes and is not like malaria or West Nile virus. So it was not difficult for doctors to know the cause of the infection.
The doctors concluded that the lady who died in 2002 is likely to become infected after being hit in the insect entered her body.
The situation prompted doctors to warn of killing mosquitoes, standing on the skin.
Christina Coyle said one participant in the study: "I think it would be better repel mosquitoes, rather than kill him."
U.S. medical study warned that the killing of mosquitoes in and stood on the human skin.
The study, published in the Journal England of Medicine, that the killing of mosquitoes in and stood on the human skin can be infected with human infection.
And The study, prepared by the doctors from the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in New York, after the death of a woman in the seventh and fifty-year-old after suffering from fungal infection in the muscles.
And doctors believed she became infected after killing a mosquito was standing on her body, causing that part of the insect enters the skin and infect infection.
And hit this fungal infection doctors puzzled. Not only because they are not found only in mosquitoes and other insects. But are found in the saliva of mosquitoes and is not like malaria or West Nile virus. So it was not difficult for doctors to know the cause of the infection.
The doctors concluded that the lady who died in 2002 is likely to become infected after being hit in the insect entered her body.
The situation prompted doctors to warn of killing mosquitoes, standing on the skin.
Christina Coyle said one participant in the study: "I think it would be better repel mosquitoes, rather than kill him."