The virus of chicken pox and measles are different
This is just possible theoretically. But it should be very rare in practice to have such patient.
they are different viruses, you can get them in any order or both at the same time.
Yes, you can get a blood test to check your titer (immunity level) for measles, chickenpox, and rubella (German measles).
What if your teacher, Mr. Toscano, has never had measles, mumps, or chickenpox?
Yes, you can get chickenpox after having measles. Although both are viral infectious diseases that cause rashes, they are caused by different viruses, and a history of one doesn't give immunity to the other.
Chickenpox, flu, HIV, measles, and mumps are all viral infectious diseases.
There is more than one type of measles (plus 21 strains), rubella, smallpox, and chickenpox all have similar signs and symptoms.
Chickenpox, measles, and polio are viral infections don't have medications that cure at this time. If someone gets one of these infections, they get supportive care to help with symptoms until the immune system works to resolve the infection.
HIV, measles, chickenpox, the common cold, herpes, and mononucleosis are all viral infectious diseases.
Measles and chicken pox are two completely different viruses. Symptoms of measles include sore throat, cough, a fever, and a rash inside the mouth.
It's measles.
It's believed to have been either chickenpox or measles