I am not sure what you are asking with this question, but a vaccine normally contains dead portions of the virus it is going to protect you against. The dead virus allows your body to produce anti-bodies capable to defending your body against the live virus if you were to come in contact with it. This could result in you never being infected by this virus, or that the symptomes will not be as harsh as normal.
# antibodies against the virus form in the bloodDepending on the type of response you have in mind, two things:An immune response creating the desired immunity, or,A local response to the vaccine in the local tissue at the needle site, if the vaccine were injected.
Full form of OPV Oral Polio Vaccine.
Tetanus Toxoids vaccine
Tetanus-Diphtheria Vaccine
Typhoid-paratyphoid A and B vaccine
Typhoid A & B and Cholera Vaccine
# antibodies against the virus form in the bloodDepending on the type of response you have in mind, two things:An immune response creating the desired immunity, or,A local response to the vaccine in the local tissue at the needle site, if the vaccine were injected.
The act or practice of inoculating someone with a vaccine as a protection against disease is known as a vaccination. Examples of vaccinations include the flu vaccine and the MMR vaccine.
A vaccine is a form of disease prevention, not a cure for a disease.
True
Typhoid-paratyphoid A and B vaccine
One someone has hepatitis b the vaccine for them is of no use True or false?