No chicken pox is all ways a little itchy. When most people get chicken pox they are so itchy. When my 3 brothers and my sister and I all had chicken pox at the same time their was a lot of scratching are bodes in the house. My sister and 2 of my brothers had to get rushed to the hospital because they had chicken pox in side their bodes. One of my brothers died at the hospital because he had about 100 chicken pox spots in side his body. My brother who had to go to the hospital but did not die now has to use a breathing musheen and has to use a wheel chair to get a round. My sister has to use a feeding tube and is blind and has to use a wheel chair to get a round.
The chicken pox is a very common viral infection. It lasts about 2 weeks, and it itches for 5-10 days, depending on when the blisters crust over.
Chicken pox is itchy because you just can't stop scratching you chicken pox. Every time you scratch your body that has chicken pox you just make you body more itchy. Try not to scratch
Chicken pox will scar because it is very itchy. Young children typically develop chicken pox and will itch the bumps until they form scars.
Chickenpox infection induces the production of cytokines, inflammatory mediators of the immune system. This turn of events often causes body aches.
Im not sure
you don't get a scar when it goes away
VERY annoying and itching red splodges on your skin that turn into blisters, then sores, then scabs. Some may eventually scar.
A chickenpox "carrier" is someone who is infected with chickenpox but does not have symptoms. Anyone susceptible to chickenpox can be a chickenpox carrier. If you are a carrier, typically you will develop blisters as the illness progresses.
It could be from the chickenpox. I have a small one on my forehead from scratching to hard. Or you have weak scar tissue on your ankle causing scars from little injuries
Scabs are not infectious, you are infected before scabs turn up. You can't really destroy them. If you pick them then they form a scar, its best to leave them.
There is no chickenpox RNA; chickenpox is a DNA virus.
A person with a history of chickenpox or history of chickenpox vaccine will typically have a positive antibody test for chickenpox.
Chickenpox vaccine is useful. It reduces the risk of chickenpox, of complications, hospitalizations, and deaths from chickenpox, and of shingles.
Chickenpox is not an autoimmune disease. Chickenpox is a viral communicable disease.
chickenpox's
Yes, you can give chickenpox vaccine in the same area as other vaccines.