: They live in our bodies. They are in meat, like fish.. They are also in fleas, ticks, insects. They are in the air, and in our food-like fruits and vegetables. They are also in our drinking water so make sure you have a good filter. They are almost everywhere. I have done research and read that parasites killed more human beings than world war I or II. I was like whoa, when I read that. I will keep researching about them, and you should too for health reasons. The most dangerous place for a parasite to live in your body would be the brain- deaths have occurred because of that.
: Here are a few links of good information about parasites: : http://www.appliedozone.com/parasites.html : http://www.the-natural-path.com/parasite-cleanse.html (really good) : http://animal.discovery.com/tv/monsters-inside-me/(good) : http://parasitesinwater.com/ : http://curezone.com/diseases/parasites/anderson.asp (really good) : http://irreatable.blogspot.com/2009/03/what-purpose-do-parasites-serve.html : http://www.paradevices.com/how_parasites.html
Parasites can be acquired through direct or indirect contacts with infected host it can be from definitive host humans, or an intermediate host animals through ingestion of contaminated food and water, skin penetration (walking with bare foot), inhalation of air-borne eggs, bite of arthropods, congenital and sexual transmission.
There are many different parasites and they can be found every where on the body from the gut to the hair under the skin in the blood stream and even inside some of the body's cells,
inside a host cell
An obligate parasite can only live inside a cell. This includes viruses and intracellular bacteria. A facultative parasite can live inside or outside of a cell.
Because they are obligate parasites
No, Streptococcus pneumoniae is not an intracellular obligate parasite. It is a bacterium that typically colonizes the upper respiratory tract of humans and can cause infections such as pneumonia, sinusitis, and meningitis. It is capable of surviving and replicating both inside and outside of host cells.
Moraxella are: - bacteria - short gram negative rods that occur in pairs - obligate parasites of mucosal surfaces
Yes, although it's an obligate intracellular parasite, it has the morphological charactestics of bacteria.
The rickettsias and chlamydias are obligate intracellular parasites.
Yes, chlamydias are obligate intracellular parasites.
An obligate parasite can only live inside a cell. This includes viruses and intracellular bacteria. A facultative parasite can live inside or outside of a cell.
Sporozoa is a species of obligate intracellular protozoan parasites. These are the causing agent of malaria in humans and animals, transmitted by female mosquitoes.
These are called intracellular parasites. All viruses are in this group. Obligate bacteria types include Rickettisae and Chlamydia. Also there are a few that are considered to be non-obligate:Mycobacterium and Brucella.
Chlamydia lives off its host cell. It's an obligate intracellular parasite.
rickettsias are obligate intracellular parasites,It is a highly pleomorphic bacteria.For the source and more detailed information concerning your request, click on the related links section (Wikipedia) indicated directly below this answer section.
viruses are obligate intracellular entities and are considered to be acellular
Because viruses need a live host in order to reproduce. Viruses are obligate intracellular parasites. Therefore, they cannot reproduce outside their host cell, and therefore die out. They are diffcult to culture because you need something living in order to culture them in, and see the progress.
Because they are obligate parasites
Chlamydia is a sexually transmitted bacterial infection. It is caused by Chlamydia trachomatis, a gram-negative bacteria with a coccoid shape that is an obligate intracellular parasite. It is curable.
Erlichia are obligate intracellular bacteria, carried by ticks, which infect white blood cells.