there is actually 5
Life Goes On - 1989 Chicken Pox 2-7 was released on: USA: 4 November 1990
You probably had measles, German measles or chicken pox or even a simple outbreak of dermatitis. Chicken pox will leave scares when you scratched at the scabs. If you have these scares I would figure you had chicken pox.
1. Infection with a virus or bacteria, like 'flu or chicken pox. 2. Heat Stroke. 3. Malignancy.
Friends - 1994 The One with the Chicken Pox 2-23 was released on: USA: 9 May 1996 Portugal: 10 October 2005
Golan the Insatiable - 2013 A Pox on Your Pox 1-2 was released on: USA: 11 January 2013
Friends - 1994 The One with the Chicken Pox 2-23 is rated/received certificates of: Argentina:Atp Hungary:12 Mexico:B Netherlands:AL USA:TV-PG
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.
1. Chicken Pox. 2. Tetnis vaccine. 3. Flu vaccine. 4. Small Pox. 5. Polio. 6. (New) Swine flu shot. 7. (New) Aids vaccine
Absolutely. Chicken-pox is very contagious, especially during the first 2 to 5 days.
The incubation period for shingles is 2 to 3 weeks. This incubation period is the same for chicken pox as well.
Yes, chickenpox is a disease caused by varicella zoster virus. There are now effective vaccines against this virus, which prevent the disease. Chickenpox is not a dangerous disease for healthy children; but it is a much more serious disease for teens and adults, infants, pregnant women and immune-compromised people of any age. Interestingly, if you get chickenpox, the virus continues to reside in your body for the rest of your life, hiding out in the nervous system. It can suddenly become active years or decades later, erupting in an itching burning rash called Shingles. The rash usually disappears in about 2 weeks, but the itching and burning can continue for weeks because of nerve inflammation caused by the varicella eruption.
Shingles are caused by the same virus that caused Chicken Pox, Varicella zoster virus (VZV). The virus remains dormant in nerve cells, and sometimes is reactivated in later life, causing Shingles.