People of any age and both genders can get chickenpox.
Chickenpox affected history by killing off a large number of people. This occurred before a vaccine was invented to prevent the disease from occurring in humans.
yes it is
yes
Getting chickenpox as an adult has a higher risk of complications and death.
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.
Aids is caught by having sex with a infected person, or having infected blood.while chickenpox is coght from the air or viral.
You cannot get chickenpox twice. Your body adapts to the virus and you no longer break out. You can, however, get shingles later in life from the chickenpox virus still in your body.
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.
The most common areas to be affected are the face and trunk, which correspond to the areas where the chickenpox rash is most concentrated.
Chickenpox vaccination is typically given in the deltoid or vastus lateralis. The choice usually depends on the age of the patient.
Since chicken pox seems to mutate into worse cases as the season progresses, my thought is that the children who get it last (or who are older before catching it) are sicker. Temperatures run higher as does the number of lesions.
chickenpox can cause death in a person of any age. This happens due to complications such as pnuemonia, meningitis, staph infections etc.