What is going on in China? Mysterious pneumonia affecting children? Should we panic?? No! But be prepared. Mycoplasma is a bacteria that is treatable with antibiotics like Zithromax. It causes what we call walking pneumonia. If it’s a virus like flu, RSV or covid I’ll say build your immunity with Vit C, D and Quercitin. I also recommend everyone get hydroxychloroquine and ivermectin in their medicine cabinet. Do not wait till you get sick or it reaches our shores. Our covid care complete pack includes both and Zithromax. So you’ll be covered. Make a telehealth appointment on http://drstellamd.com. Do not be scared! Be prepared!
https://twitter.com/stella_immanuel/status/1728650864909295923
She was right about the first scam they pulled so I'd trust the info. I wouldn't order anything from her though. Had a bad experience that was never resolved.
Thanks for the rundown. Retired OMS so I can vouch for the extremely serious dental infections. I did a lot of hospital stuff (trauma, etc. and it included severe infections). I always worried about the C-diff thing but I was fortunate in my career to not have any complications that didn't resolve without a bit of help from my hospitalist friends. During my career antibiotics for prophylactic use were severely cut back in use and the way we gave them, making complications less of a risk.
Thanks for your input. Retired from GP myself. Worked in medical research before going into clinical practice.
I can attest to the seriousness of dental infections that people blow off. I got pretty good at just telling by how someone looked that they had a serious dental problem brewing. Impacted 3rd molars were not uncommon and people walk around with that time bomb for years. I had one guy with bad MD molar that he was putting off treating despite his wife and myself insisting he get get it taken care of. Over a weekend his wife said he didn't look well and wanted to take him to the ER. Never ignore the wife's instincts. He wanted to ignore her and go to the dentist the following week but she wasn't having it. He developed a rapid onset severe cellulitis. If he had not gone to the ER when he did, the doc at the ER said he would not have made it through the night. By the time the wife got him to the ER he could barely breath. He spent almost 2 weeks in the hospital.
Spent a short rotation with a OMS/MD at the hospital. Learned a lot from that guy. Like you, a lot of trauma and reconstructive cases. It is amazing how you guys put shattered faces and lives back together. Our training really lacks study on dental issues and the havoc they can cause - got to keep the domains separated you know.