No but good question
yes it does
The shots are to protect them from common diseases. These shots actually have a very small dose of the virus, so that their bodies can get immune to it so if they get the virus it won't be so severe as it was the first time exposed to it.
The allergy shots are designed to work like vaccinations. It slowly exposes your body to your allergy thus making you more immune to it. So it is very much worth it to get these shots.
The role of a complement system in immune response is to make sure that no bad cells penetrate the immune system. A complement system of immunization might be a series of shots, like booster shots for immunizations.
A person with allergies is generally understood to have an immune system that over-reacts to normal and inocuous materials, such as pollen. The "allergy shot" is an injected solution containing a very dilute and small amount of these materials. The idea behind allergy shots is to continuously expose the immune system to very low levels of the material so that the immune system learns to "tolerate" the material and the person will stop having allergy symptoms. Generally the person will need to be on allergy shots for the rest of his/her life - without constant low-level stimulation, the immune system tends to lose its tolerance and the allergy symptoms return.
Prior flu shots are assessed based on their effectiveness, safety, and the recipient's immune response. Effectiveness is measured by how well the vaccine reduces the incidence of flu illness, while safety involves monitoring for adverse reactions. Additionally, the recipient's immune response is evaluated through antibody levels to determine how well the vaccine prompted an immune defense against the virus.
Its next immunization shots are due at the eight-month mark. It's important to keep up on your baby's shots, because infants' immune systems are extremely fragile at such a young age.
The US dropped 50 atomic bombs from airplanes between 1945 and 1962 (2 in combat on Japan, 48 in test shots). Over 1000 were detonated in other ways in test shots between 1945 and 1992. The USSR, UK, and France also dropped atomic bombs from airplanes and detonated many in other ways in test shots (but never used any in combat).
shaquille o'neal
They have a weak dilute of the disease so the body will build antibodies against the disease thereby causing immunity.
Puppy shots do not treat for worms. Vaccinations trigger the immune system to develop antibodies to viruses. Worms (intestinal parasites) need to be diagnosed and treated with an appropriate anti-parasitic agent (dewormer).
WeLl now that we have shots, it can keep kids immune to diseases that we couldn't before.