You can get chickenpox on your scrotum and on any skin or mucous membranes.
The answer is the scrotum, the testis are in the scrotum.
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.
The scrotum is the pouch of skin containing the testes. It is divided into two parts and also contains the epididymides and the lower sections of the spermatic cords.
The plural of the word scrotum is scrotums.
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.
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Yes, you can give chickenpox vaccine in the same area as other vaccines.
The pouch of skin that contains the testes is called the scrotum.
Yes, anybody can get chickenpox.
Chickenpox is an illness. It has no advantages.