Yes, it just depends on the person. Two of the same people could catch the same virus but one person with the virus could have the virus worst than the other person or they coud react differently to the virus then the other people. Hope I helped!
Yes. Some people can be sick but never feel it at all, while others can be laid out completely by this same cold or flu. It just depends on that person's body and how it reacts.
It is because of the way the body responds to the virus and what tissues the virus infects. The virus that causes AIDS for example, affects different tissues and doesn't show the same way as measles does.
No, mononucleosis and meningococcal disease are different infections with different cause, symptoms, and prognosis.
No, symptoms are because of the cause!
yes
Yes, exposure to bad smells can sometimes cause symptoms like nausea, headaches, or respiratory issues, but it is not the same as getting sick from a virus or bacteria.
No, measles and smallpox are two different infectious diseases caused by different viruses. Measles is caused by the measles virus (MeV), while smallpox is caused by the variola virus. Both diseases can be prevented through vaccination, but they have different symptoms and levels of severity.
attenuated virus consist of same virus but its capacity to cause disease has deleted by the process of attenuation.
The virus responsible for remotic fever is the "Remotic virus." This virus is classified under the family of viruses that cause febrile illnesses but is not widely recognized or studied in the same way as more prominent viruses like the flu or COVID-19. Due to its limited documentation, specific details about its transmission and symptoms may not be well established.
Sometimes. Myalgia (pain in a muscle) itself is a symptomof various causes, such as injury, strain, many diseases, disorders, and infections, including bacterial or viral infections, which are contagious and the symptom of muscle pain could be called viral myalgia when the cause is a virus. In that case, the virus would be contagious.However if you catch the same virus that is causing another person to have symptoms of muscle pain, you may or may not also have the same symptoms since each individual's response to infection can be different. You could have caught the contagious virus they had, but you may not have "caught" the same exact symptoms. Instead of muscle pain, you might have headaches or muscle weakness or other such effects of the virus.To name only some contagious diseases and infections that can cause myalgia, they are:InfluenzaOther viruses, e.g., polio and noroviruses (viral "stomach flu", aka viral gastroenteritis)Bacterial infections, such as an abscess of a muscleLyme diseaseMalariaThe common cold, e.g., rhinoviruses and coronaviruses
Chickenpox virus doesn't cause cold sores. Although the viruses that cause chickenpox and cold sores are similar, herpes simplex virus causes cold sores, and varicella zoster virus causes chickenpox.
i think its because the same virus that can cause mumps can cause orchitis too