You will die fast dummy
A latent virus is a unactive virus that sits in your body that eventually becomes active with no explained reason. An example is a cold sore. You dont know its coming until its done. That is a virus in your lip.
Is yellow fever latent of active
It becomes an active virus
active
A latent virus is a virus that is not active, but could be. For instance, after a person has chickenpox, the outbreak clears up, but it could outbreak again later in life as shingles. The virus never goes away, just becomes latent.
This is called a latent virus.
A latent virus remains dormant in the host cell without causing symptoms, but can reactivate later to cause disease. An active virus continuously replicates and causes symptoms, leading to an active infection. Both types of viruses can cause disease, but latent viruses have periods of inactivity while active viruses are constantly causing symptoms.
A hidden virus is known in the words in its name "HIDDEN virus". It hides and stays inactive. The active virus is also known in its name too "ACTIVE virus". The two viruses have different ways on spreading it own kind throughout the host or hosts.
A Latent Virus
When a virus enters a body but remains inactive, it is referred to as a "latent" infection. In this state, the virus may remain dormant within host cells without causing symptoms or replicating. Latent infections can reactivate later, leading to active disease. Examples include the herpes simplex virus and varicella-zoster virus.
known as a viral reactivation. It occurs when the virus becomes active again after being inactive in the body for a period of time. This can happen due to factors such as stress, illness, or a weakened immune system.
Active viral infections occur when a virus replicates and causes symptoms in the host, leading to the production of new viral particles. In contrast, latent viral infections involve the virus remaining dormant within the host's cells without causing immediate symptoms; it can reactivate later, potentially leading to active infection again. This distinction is crucial for understanding viral behavior in the body and for treatment approaches. Examples include herpes simplex virus for latent infections and influenza virus for active infections.