Mild means not very severe or serious.
Mild means not very severe or serious.
You can use any mild soap when you have chickenpox.
You are not likely to get chickenpox if you are immune, but it sometimes happens. When it does, the second case is usually mild with few bumps.
You are unlikely to get chickenpox after two vaccines, but it is possible. If it occurs, you would expect a very mild case.
If you get chickenpox after having the vaccine, it is likely to be very mild case and unlikely to cause serious complications.
It would be better to avoid the use of cleansers with acids while you have chickenpox. Use a gentle cleanser and pat dry instead.
Any outbreak of chickenpox creates immunity in a healthy person. A severe outbreak doesn't make a person more immune than a mild outbreak.
Yes, you can have a case of chickenpox so mild that you didn't notice any bumps.
There is no special medical term for a mild case of chickenpox. Shingles is the term for a recurrence of chickenpox that is usually covering a small area of the body; however, the symptoms may be different and, in some ways, more severe. Shingles isn't considered a milder version of chickenpox.
It means you're immune to chickenpox.
First, you can't get shingles at any age unless you have previously had chickenpox. Although your chickenpox illness may have been so mild that you didn't notice, a diagnosis of shingles is proof that you had chickenpox. Second, only those who have never had chickenpox can get chickenpox from shingles. Third, shingles is only contagious through direct contact with wet lesions, and is not likely to be spread through casual contact.
To "rule out" something means to eliminate it as a possibility. Therefore, if the doctor has ruled out chickenpox, it means she has decided that you don't have chickenpox.