Transient bacteremia is the temporary presence of bacteria in the bloodstream. It can occur during activities like tooth brushing, flossing, or invasive medical procedures, allowing bacteria from the mouth or other sites to enter the bloodstream. In healthy individuals, the immune system typically clears these bacteria without causing any symptoms or complications.
Bacteremia is the condition of having bacteria in the bloodstream.
Bacteremia is diagnosed by culturing the blood for bacteria
Bacteremia is an invasion of the blood stream with bacteria.
Sepsis is another term meaning bacteremia.
ICD 9 CM code for Bacteremia 790.7
People in good health with strong immune systems rarely develop bacteremia
In some cases, bacteremia leads to septic shock, a potentially life-threatening condition
"Bacter" refers to bacteria, "emia" refers to a condition of the blood. Therefore, "bacteremia" means the presence of bacteria in the blood.
790.7
Symptoms of bacteremia are fever, chills, mental confusion, anxiety, rapid heart beat, hyperventilation, blood clotting problems, and shock.
Alex C. Sonnenwirth has written: 'Bacteremia: laboratory and clinical aspects' -- subject(s): Bacteremia, Blood, Examination
That is a good question. You have bacteremia in first week of typhoid fever. This bacteria can settle almost every where, in your body, during this bacteremia. So you can have typhoid arthritis.