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The small does introduces the body to the disease, (small amounts) so the body then can produce antibodies, so that when the body is exposed to it, it can fight it off.

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Q: How dos the vaccine make someone immune to mumps?
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Why should you have the MMR vaccine?

because in make you immune to measles, mumps and rubella


Will the hpv vaccine make you immune to genital warts if you've already had them?

No it won't.


What is a small dose of weakened pathogens that make you immune to disease called?

a vaccine


Does the flu vaccine include antibodies?

No, a flu vaccine triggers our bodies to make our own antibodies. The vaccine includes dead or weakened viruses that can't make us sick, but they will cause the immune response that creates the correct antibodies.


How do you prevent measles?

stay clean wash hands cover mouth with elbow when you cough.With the MMR vaccine. (measles, mumps, rubella).yes you can get you MMR vaccinations done. It stands for Measles Mumps Rubella and it is a group of vaccinations that make sure you dont catch measlesIsolation (vaccinations help).Stay away from people with measels. Wear a protective mask to prevent breathing in germs.


What is present in a vaccine to make white bloood cells create antibodies?

A vaccine usually contains a weakened form of the virus, strong enough to trigger your immune response but weak enough to be defeated by it.


What is used to make measles vaccine?

The MMR vaccine (Measles, Mumps and Rubella) is a live, attenuated (weakened), combination vaccine that protects against the measles, mumps, and rubella viruses. It was first licensed in the combined form in 1971 and contains the safest and most effective forms of each vaccine. It is made by taking the measles virus from the throat of an infected person and adapting it to grow in chick embryo cells in a laboratory. As the virus becomes better able to grow in the chick embryo cells, it becomes less able to grow in a child's skin or lungs. When this vaccine virus is given to a child it replicates only a little before it is eliminated from the body. This replication causes the body to develop an immunity that, in 95% of children, lasts for a lifetime. A second dose of the vaccine is recommended to protect those 5% who did not develop immunity in the first dose and to give "booster" effect to those who did develop an immune response.


What is a medicine that stimulates the body's immune response to make disease-fighting molecules to attack a specific pathogen?

vaccine


What does the tb vaccination do?

The BCG vaccine contains a strain of mycobacterium bovis, which is a bacterium that causes tuberculosis (TB) in cattle. The bacteria have been altered so that they do not cause a TB infection but make your immune system produce antibodies. These make you immune (resistant) to the disease.


Will a tetanus shot cause an armpit to fell sore?

Yes. A vaccine shot will make your immune system go into overdrive. A part of the immune system are the lymph nodes, and two of them are in the armpits. If they are active, they swell, which can lead to soreness.


Is it bad to get the meningitis vaccine twice?

No it isn't. The vaccine is considered safe and an extra dose would not cause problems with your immune response, in fact, it might make it work even better to prevent pneumonia, as it would act as an added "booster".


How does immunisation work?

Immunisation works on a process when the body is injected with or swallows vaccine. Body produces an immune response. If a person comes in contact with a disease in future, body is able to make an immune response fast enough to prevent illness.