Black black and only black
The chickenpox virus appears all over a person's body when they have it. It shows up in the form of red dots, and can be contagious.
As chickenpox bumps develop, they start as red bumps and then transform to blisters, sores, and then scabs.
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.
no they are not related... chicken pox was just named after the chicken because the little blisters that burst up look like the peckmarks of a chicken
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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Varicella is another name for chickenpox. There is a vaccine now for chickenpox. Children often got chickenpox when they were very young. This virus remains in the body until the immune system cannot repress it anymore. It then re-activates and forms shingles. About one in three will get shingles. A child who gets the vaccine will not get shingles when he gets older. The symptoms of chickenpox local look a lot like a "chicken pecked" a spot on the skin. These will begin to scab over in a few days. The scabs can be infectious.
Yes, you can give chickenpox vaccine in the same area as other vaccines.
Yes, anybody can get chickenpox.
Chickenpox is an illness. It has no advantages.