Yes, you can get live and dead vaccines at the same time. The only limitation is getting dead vaccines within a short period of time after the day you got live vaccine.
Yes, you can give a live vaccine and killed or attenuated vaccine in the same day.
yes
Yes! Vaccines for diseases such as flu, cholera, bubonic plague and hepatitis A contain dead microorganisms. They are killed by heat or chemical treatment. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vaccine
Azithromycin is not a vaccine; it's an antibiotic.
Vaccines are important tools that help prevent the spread of infectious diseases. A vaccine is a substance introduced into the body to stimulate the production of chemicals that destroy specific viruses or bacteria. A vaccine may be made from dead or altered viruses or bacteria. Because they are dead or altered, the viruses or bacteria in the vaccine do not cause disease. Instead, they activate the body's natural defenses. In effect, the vaccine puts the body "on alert." If that virus or bacterium ever invades the body, it is destroyed before it can cause disease. You may have been vaccinated against diseases such as polio, measles, tetanus, and chickenpox.
Dead and it cannot cause infection. It is a subunit vaccine.
The intramuscular vaccine for poliomyelitis is inactived meaning it is not live the oral vaccine, now no longer used, was live. Go to the CDC.gov website to learn more about vaccines
It is inactivated toxin vaccine (Diptheria, Tetnus) and killed bacteria (Pertrussi)
Leptospirosis is spread mainly by contact with water or soil contaminated by the urine of infected rodents and wildlife. If your dog isn't outside unsupervised, or doesn't ever drink from puddles, streams or rivers or has contact with dead animals, it's probably safe not to vaccinate for Lepto. With any vaccine, there is always the chance that the dog might contract the disease that the vaccine was supposed to protect against, or possibly have some other a side effect. This a slim chance, the protection that most dogs get from being vaccinated usually outweigh the risks. But in answer to your question, no, the vaccine doesn't cause the dog to get Lepto. Best of luck!
Theword is likely one of these :DISEASE (noun) - a condition or afflictionDECEASE (verb) - to die (used as deceased, dead)
A vaccine
medicine containing dead or weakened pathogens
A dead or very weak form of the disease.
Rabies