Vaccination stimulates the immune system to recognize and respond to specific pathogens by introducing a harmless component of the pathogen, such as a protein or inactivated virus. This exposure helps the body produce memory cells that "remember" the pathogen, allowing for a faster and more effective immune response upon future encounters. As a result, vaccinated individuals have a long-term ability to resist disease, as their immune system is primed to act quickly and effectively against infections that the vaccine protects against.
is the ability of the body to resist disease to fight disease..
refers to the cardiomuscular respiratory effeieciency which contribute to the ability to resist deasis
Vaccination
Vaccination introduce small amount of a disease to your body so that your natural immune systems builds anti-bodies and such to fight the disease. This makes your immune system stronger so that it can more effectively fight the disease or completely resist the disease when you get exposed to the real thing. How is that?
Immuniyt is the ability of the body to resist infection by a certain disease. that's all thank you.
Active vaccination produces antibodies against the particular organism. These antibodies kill the invading pathogen and protect the body against the disease.
When you are vaccinated, your body builds up an immune response to the vaccination. This protects you from the disease you were vaccinated for. There is some controversy about vaccination.
Hard work after a vaccination can compromise the body's ability to respond to the vaccine, leading to a less strong immunity to the disease vaccinated against. Light exercise and turnout after vaccination may be beneficial to help reduce stiffness and soreness at the injection site, but heavy work should be avoided.
There is a vaccination available. A dead or weakened form of the disease is injected into the body and the body builds up an immunity to the disease. Antibodies recognize the disease microbes and attack them.
A vaccination is weakened germs of a disease. When you get injected with these germs, your body build an immunity against it, so when you really get the disease, your body can fight it off.
Vaccination entails giving the person a weakened form of the disease. This triggers the body's immune system to build up antibodies to the disease. Then if the real disease tries to attack the body, it is already ready to fight back.
A vaccination contains tiny strains of the disease it is fighting. Because it's such a tiny amount, it gives your immune system the chance to build a fight against it, so if you ever did happen to pick up the disease, your body knows how to attack it