Chicken Pox is a virus that causes a short illness in children. It is a rapidly spread contagion among children and anyone who never had chicken pox as a child.
Chicken Pox has absolutely no relation to any god/God. Chicken Pox is just like other viruses, such as the ones that cause the common cold or flues. Chicken Pox, however, can cause scarring for children, and organ damage for adults.
From the beginning of time....through the future... humans have always and will continue to be vulnerable to viruses, which cannot be cured with antibiotics. Viruses mutate, just like bacteria do, so developing just ONE medicine or vaccine is often impossible.
No. Chickenpox did not come from smallpox they are 2 separate viruses.
Chickenpox is no longer contagious once all lesions are crusted over.
Scabies and chicken box are unrelated infections, and having chicken pox in the past does not protect against scabies.
Shingles is a viral disease related to chickenpox. It results from reactivation of the lifelong infection with the chickenpox virus. Chickenpox can cause myocarditis as a complication. There can be secondary bacterial infection of the skin. Rarely there can be viral encephalitis.
Shingles is not contagious -- it can't be "caught" from someone else. People with shingles can give you chickenpox if you haven't had it. See related link below for information on transmitting shingles
Herpes simplex type one is one virus in the herpesvirus family. Chickenpox is caused by varicella zoster virus, which is in the same virus family.
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
Yes. The only thing I am aware of that remotely might be related to your question is that if someone has sickle cell anemia they are unlikely to get malaria.
People who have chickenpox normally develop immunity that lasts throughout their life, and they are unlikely to get chickenpox a second time. It is possible for a person who had chickenpox earlier to get shingles, a related disease that affects between one fifth and one third of those who had chickenpox earlier.
Chickenpox vaccine first became mandatory in US states in 1997. It is currently mandated in 49 states, with Montana the exception. For information on dates of mandatory vaccine immunization in various states, see related link.
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.