yes, you can be left with unbelievable and permanent brain damage that can end up spreading throughout your body, you should see a doctor.
From my experience, no it doesn't it just makes you itchy, ALOT! So be careful what you do and who you touch.
The difference is that one can have a brain injury and not have brain damage. Essentially, brain damage is caused by injury or trauma to the brain. However, not every injury to the brain will cause brain damage.
The difference is that one can have a brain injury and not have brain damage. Essentially, brain damage is caused by injury or trauma to the brain. However, not every injury to the brain will cause brain damage.
If you have the chickenpox, you should stay home until you are no longer contagious; that is, until all blisters and sores have scabbed.
Someone with chickenpox should stay home from work until all lesions are scabbed. In the US, your employer's policy about leave is individual to the company.
After having chickenpox, the varicella zoster virus retreats to your spinal cord nerves, not your blood, where it remains for live.
Yes. It does help. By enlarge chickenpox does not leave any scars on face or rest of the body. But it is always good job to take help from your family physician.
Kids and Brain DamageAnyone can have brain damage. even children. some can be unlucky.
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.
Brain Damage - film - was created in 1988.
when you flatline how long before you get brain damage.
Congenital means that the baby was born with it. So if a baby has congenital brain damage, then it means that the baby was born with the brain damage.
Long term effects are pretty much only scars.