This is not possible unless they have a highly defective immune system, which would leave them open to many serious infections. Consultation with a doctor is highly advised.
Adults can get both chickenpox and shingles. Prior to universal vaccination in the US, chickenpox was considered a "childhood" disease. Since vaccination became routine, the average age of chickenpox patients has increased. The virus that causes the disease, varicella zoster virus, lives, dormant, in the spinal cord after the disease is over . In later adult years, this can flare up again as shingles. An adult who never had chickenpox or the vaccine can't get shingles. Between one in five and one in three adults will get shingles after having chickenpox.
a twenty years old parson called in Hindi "ballig" , because he is not a teenage or a youth
Chickenpox has decreased significantly in the last 20 years in the US since chickenpox vaccine was approved in the US in 1995.
Chickenpox in adulthood does not have a special name. However, shingles is an infection that can result from later reactivation of your lifelong infection with chickenpox virus. It happens most often in adults.
Current recommendations are for two doses of chickenpox vaccine, regardless of the history of chickenpox or shingles.
Over the last twenty years, the Yankees made the playoffs 17 times.1995-2007, 2009-2012
In the last twenty years, the number of families with adult children living at home.
Deaths from chickenpox in the US since approval of the vaccine in 1995 have declined 90%.
Chickenpox has been around for thousands of years, and it's not possible to who was the first person it killed.
It isn't. The rest of the body is small.
50
Chickenpox is time limited, while urticaria can continue for years. But chickenpox can kill you and urticaria can't. Hard to say which is better or worse.