Once you have been exposed to that virus, your body has memory cells that will respond very quickly. Actually, you can be attacked again but you will not get the disease again because these memory cells will destroy the virus.
Once you have been exposed to that virus, your body has memory cells that will respond very quickly. Actually, you can be attacked again but you will not get the disease again because these memory cells will destroy the virus.
Chickenpox can be prevented . The easiest way to prevent catching chicken pox is to get vaccinated. However, vaccination is only successful in 70% to 90% of all vaccinations. Individuals who have been vaccinated but still acquire chickenpox, usually have a milder disease that heals more quickly than non vaccinated individuals.
A carrier of chickenpox is someone who is infected but doesn't have symptoms. Most people who get chickenpox do not get infected twice. You are not likely to get chickenpox as an adult if you had them as a child.
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.
If you get chickenpox after having the vaccine, it is likely to be very mild case and unlikely to cause serious complications.
Chickenpox is likely to increase the white blood count in a full blood count.
It's possible, but not likely, to get chickenpox twice after getting chickenpox vaccine. Talk with your health care provider to find out how certain was the diagnosis.
You can only transmit chickenpox to someone if you have the chickenpox yourself.Once you had chicken pox you can not get it again-that is what is believed by doctors and scientists. You should be vaccinated for it because if you were not and did not have it when you were young you can get it when you are elderly but it is worse and called "shingles."
Children as a group are more likely to get chickenpox because they are less likely to have had chickenpox previously. Chickenpox is highly contagious, and usually confers lifelong immunity, so adults are likely to be immune. In countries without routine vaccination, 90% of adults are immune to chickenpox due to previous infection.
Chickenpox is more likely to be found in temperate countries than in tropical countries, and is more likely in countries in which chickenpox vaccination is not routine for children.
Chickenpox in children and adults is typically throughout the body. Shingles is likely to be found on only one part of the body.
Most people get chickenpox when they are young, which is good. Although children can pull through chicken pox easily, if not uncomfortably, it is much more devastating to adults. Plus, once you have it as a kid, the cells go into remission in your body, your B cells produce antibodies for chickenpox, and there's a extremely high chance that you will never get chickenpox again. But you can get it at any age.