Want this question answered?
The difference between a vaccine and a booster is the time it is given. A vaccine is primarily referred to as the first dose of a medicine to prevent disease. A booster is a dose given after the initial dose to strengthen the effect of the first dose.
The synonym for dangers is threats. Also, two dose not have a synonym.
lots or none
a repeating idea in a story
if previous dose date known booster dose every 5 th year.
Addiction and over-dose.
There is no separate amount or formulation given for the "booster dose." The first and second vaccines are exactly the same. If you've gotten one, you should get the second dose no sooner than 3 months from the first if you are under 13, and no sooner than 4 weeks if you are over 13.
it is very dangerous gamma is can get into your skin and kill you if you get a low dose of it but if it is a high dose they you are ok.
All three HPV vaccinations are the same, with the same dose and contents.
The swine flu vaccine was produced, for children's doses, to be given in a specifically timed sequence of two vaccinations to achieve full immunity. This is because children under 10 have immature immune systems with a less vigorous response to the vaccine than adults get in a single dose. The first vaccination for children (aged 6 months through 9 years) is administered and then in a month after that, a second is given. After another 3 weeks they should have developed enough of the right antibodies to be protected for life for that specific virus, and without the need for any further vaccinations against it.More:According to the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease:For 3 -9 yrs old's a single dose only provides protection for 55% of childrenA second dose increases to 94%.See the link in the related links below for more about vaccinations (from MSNBC).
Dangers of combining drubs with alcoholif too much of a dose-you will/could dielung cancerblack liverdizzinesstiredness/energy to the dangerous point
For all horses and foals, three months of age and above, the primary vaccination course consists of two injections of Equivac-T orEquivac 2 in 1, four weeks apart, followed up by a booster dose one year later. Boosters after this are recommended every five years.