it prompts the body to produce immunity to a disease:)
Vaccine.
To inject a vaccine is to introduce a small amount of the vaccine, usually through a needle, into the body. This helps stimulate the immune system to produce antibodies and create a defense against the specific disease targeted by the vaccine.
A vaccine stimulates the body to produce antibodies against a specific disease causing pathogen. This makes the body able to fight off that disease.
A horse should receive a tetanus vaccine annually. This is a preventative measure, as the causative bacterium (Clostridium tetani) is ubiquitous in the environment and horses are extremely sensitive to the exotoxins that produce clinical signs of tetanus.
vaccine
Vaccines can help control a virus's reproduction by priming the immune system to recognize and attack the virus quickly if the body is exposed to it. By triggering an immune response, vaccines can prevent the virus from replicating and spreading throughout the body.
The vaccine is made of weakened virus particles. This causes your body to produce interferon to fight an infection. :-)
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.
No, a vaccine is not an antibody. A vaccine is a substance that stimulates the immune system to produce antibodies against a specific pathogen. Antibodies are proteins produced by the immune system in response to a vaccine or infection to help fight off the pathogen.
The immune system is stimulated to produce antibodies that can target and destroy viruses and bacteria when the body detects an infection. This immune response helps to neutralize the pathogens and prevent them from causing harm to the body.
The administration of a vaccine stimulates the body to produce a longer lasting type of immunity called "adaptive immunity." This type of immunity involves the production of specific antibodies and memory cells that provide long-term protection against the targeted pathogen.