No, unless the disease contains the name of somebody, such as Chrone's Disease.
Yes, you can get a blood test to check your titer (immunity level) for measles, chickenpox, and rubella (German measles).
This is just possible theoretically. But it should be very rare in practice to have such patient.
You do not capitalize chickenpox in a sentence. The exception is if the word is the first in the sentence.
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.
What if your teacher, Mr.Toscano, hasn't had the measles, the mumps, or the chickenpox.
The virus of chicken pox and measles are different
No it shouldn't be capitalized.
HIV, measles, chickenpox, the common cold, herpes, and mononucleosis are all viral infectious diseases.
German Measles.
you can in measles you can in measles
Measles and chicken pox are two completely different viruses. Symptoms of measles include sore throat, cough, a fever, and a rash inside the mouth.