Meat eating disease spread in many parts of Australia.

Flesh Eating Disease Buruli Ulcer In Australia: In many parts of Australia, the meat-eating disease is spreading Buruli Ulcer. Due to which the Victoria Health Department has issued a warning on Tuesday. Several cases have been confirmed in Australia's second largest city Melbourne. After which people and health workers living in its surrounding areas have been asked to be vigilant. Burly ulcers are caused by bacteria called Mycobacterium Ulcerans present in the environment.
It is believed that the disease spreads even more rapidly due to mosquitoes. After which the Health Department has ordered that measures should be taken to prevent mosquitoes. This disease usually affects the skin of the body and sometimes also the bones (Buruli Ulcer First Signs). This creates a red color mark. If it is not treated in the beginning, then the meat from the affected area starts decreasing. There is no pain in the scar that appears in the beginning. Swelling occurs at that place, due to which many times people get misunderstood that this is happening due to the bite of a worm.
Prevention required in early stage
This disease can cause scars on any part of the body, but most of the scars remain on the legs (Buruli Ulcer Early Symptoms). This disease takes four weeks to nine months to infect a patient. Whichever part of the body affects these bacteria, the skin starts to shrink. Some cases have also come up where the patient has suffered from disability. The World Health Organization has said that in order to prevent the disease at an early stage, it is necessary to quickly identify and treat it with antibiotics.
Threat to all age groups
So far it has not been known where the disease has started. Which simply means that no primary prevention measures are being taken to avoid the disease. People of all age groups have been described as susceptible to infection. Those people who are living in the areas affected by Coronavirus or have returned from traveling there are the most at risk. Buruli Ulcer Bacteria grows at a temperature of 29–33 ° C and requires less oxygen to spread. Cases of infection have been reported in 33 countries in Africa, South America and the Western Pacific.