no you cant, that's why when you are pregnant you are tested to see if you are immune to rubella which i am as i had it as a child
Yes, it is possible.
A rubella IgG test result of 400 indicates that you have immunity to rubella, not measles. Rubella is distinct from measles, which is caused by a different virus. To be immune to measles, you would need to have a specific IgG test for measles, not rubella. Therefore, a high rubella IgG level does not imply immunity to measles.
Rubella IgG of 19.4 means that you're immune to rubella, likely due to immunization when you were young. You don't have to worry about getting German measles.
because in make you immune to measles, mumps and rubella
According to LabCorp test results, a result for Rubella IgG of 292 IU/ml means that you are immune to Rubella. According to LabCorp test results, a result for Rubella IgG of 292 IU/ml means that you are immune to Rubella.
Exposure to chickenpox or rubella by a nonimmune pregnant woman may be treated with an injection of immune globulin to help prevent fetal transmission.
All non-immune women of childbearing age should be vaccinated against rubella and chickenpox before pregnancy. Pregnant women should be tested for immunity to rubella at their first prenatal visit.
It means you may or may not be immune to rubella or German measles.The value is not high enough to say yes and not low enough to say no.The test can be repeated.
This means the person has had rubella (German measles ) or a vaccination for rubella in the past and so is now immune. This test is often part of checks before pregnancy so that a vaccine can be given if it negative before a woman becomes pregnant. The vaccine is usually the MMR (which also immunises for mumps and measles). Single vaccine rubella is no longer licenced in the UK.
It means you may or may not be immune to rubella or German measles.The value is not high enough to say yes and not low enough to say no.The test can be repeated.
Rubella, or German measles, causes swollen lymph nodes as part of the body's immune response to the viral infection. The virus triggers the activation of the immune system, leading to lymphadenopathy, which is the enlargement of lymph nodes. This occurs because lymph nodes are responsible for filtering pathogens and producing immune cells, causing them to swell when fighting off the virus. Swollen lymph nodes are a common symptom in many viral infections, including rubella.