Disease: Hepatitis A

Recent advances in microbial engineering approaches for wastewater treatment: a review

This review explains how microorganisms like bacteria, fungi, and algae can clean polluted water more effectively and cheaply than traditional methods. These microbes break down harmful chemicals, remove heavy metals, and clean industrial waste. Using multiple types of microbes together (microbial consortium) works better than using a single type, making it an environmentally friendly and economical solution for treating wastewater worldwide.

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Therapeutic Plasma Exchange in Acute Liver Failure: A Real-World Study in Mexico

Acute liver failure is a serious medical emergency where the liver suddenly stops working properly. This study found that a treatment called therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE), which filters the blood to remove harmful substances, significantly improved survival rates in liver failure patients treated in a Mexican hospital. Patients receiving TPE had a 92% survival rate at 30 days compared to only 50% in those receiving standard treatment alone, even though the TPE group had more severe cases at the start.

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