If you have chickenpox, you should stay home unless you have contacted your health care provider who specifically advised you to come into the office.
The fever for a child with chickenpox will usually last for two to three days.
They are both diseases caused by a type of organism called a "virus".Chickenpox and colds are both viral illnesses that can cause nasal congestion, sore throat, and fever.
Chickenpox is also called Varicella. The symptoms are loss of appetite, swollen and lymph glands, chills, fever, blistering rash, sore throat, and headache.
Measles and chicken pox are two completely different viruses. Symptoms of measles include sore throat, cough, a fever, and a rash inside the mouth.
Acetaminophen should be enough to help with any low-grade fever or soreness from chickenpox vaccine. If it does not, contact your health care provider for advice specific to your situation.
A fever is a symptom.
Scabies and chicken box are unrelated infections, and having chicken pox in the past does not protect against scabies.
You have sore throat in chicken pox. That makes eating painful. Secondly you have loss of appetite due to fever in chicken pox, So you find it difficult the eat anything when you have chicken pox.
You shouldn't, it should be a swab test on the back of your throat
smallpox, measles, chickenpox, influenza, malaria and yellow fever
Strep throat is affection of your throat by streptococcus pyogenes bacteria. You get pain in your throat and there is fever associated with throat pain.
Chickenpox (and other infectious diseases) do notactually cause fever. The fever is caused by the person's own immune system trying to fight the virus (or bacteria). These infectious organisms usually reproduce fastest near normal body temperature; by raising the body temperature the immune system slows their reproduction, making it easier to eliminate them.If the fever is mild it is best to leave it alone and let it do its job. Use of damp cloths on the forehead or sucking ice cubes to make the patient more comfortable should be all that is needed.Only if the fever is causing extreme discomfort or gets to about 104F (life threatening range) should other measures be taken to reduce the fever, and the advice of a medical professional should always be sought in such cases before taking action. Remember that children with chickenpox should never take aspirin, as it could cause Reye's syndrome.