What is rubella?Rubella, or German measles, is a disease caused by a virus. The virus is spread when an infected person coughs or sneezes. It travels through droplets from the infected person's airway. Anyone who breathes in the droplets can become infected. The virus can also infect a ...
What does it mean to be positive for rubella antibodies? A positive rubella IgG test result is good—it meansthat you are immune to rubella and cannot get the infection. This is the most common rubella test done. Negative: Less than 7 IU/mL IgG antibodies and less than 0.9 IgM antibodies...
Have had a severe allergic reaction to immune globulin or other blood products. Have a condition called selective (or severe) immunoglobulin A (IgA) deficiency. What should I avoid while taking GAMMAGARD LIQUID? GAMMAGARD LIQUID can make vaccines (like measles/mumps/rubella or chickenpox vaccines...
An immune system disorder, such as an autoimmune disease, lupus, or HIV A recent viral infection or bacterial infection such as measles or H pylori Pregnancy Medicines that cause low platelet levels such as medicine for seizures Rarely, vaccines, such as those for measles, mumps, and rubella...
Causes vary based on the type of purpura individuals are diagnosed with. Nonthrombocytopenic conditions can be caused by medications or drugs that affect the function of platelets,of blood vessels, congenital rubella, orcongenital cytomegalovirus. Woman can also develop this type because of the pressur...
In the public health viewpoint, ‘herd immunity’ means that “the risk of infection among susceptible individuals in a population is reduced by the presence and proximity of immune individuals” (Fine et al., 2011: 911). This depends on maintaining the threshold-proportion of VPD-immune indivi...
Herd immunity can theoretically be achievedeither through infection and recovery or by vaccination. The danger of trying to achieve herd immunity through infection is that many people will die or be forced to live with post-recovery disabilities. Moreover, research has shown that theimmune response...
As a result,if that germ infects your body later in life your immune system is ready to fight the infectionso that you don't get sick. The main types of vaccines include live attenuated vaccines inactivated vaccines, toxoid vaccines sub unit and conjugate vaccines m-RNA vaccines and viral ...
What is an immune deficiency disease? What types of diseases have the lowest virulence? What is a virulence test? What is the rubella virus? What is an acute viral disease? What type of virus is rubella? What is the study of pathogens and the disease process?
What is a zoster vaccine? Is the varicella vaccine a live vaccine? How long does the DTap vaccine last? What is the rubella virus? What is the typhoid vaccine injection used for? What is the bacterial meningitis vaccine? What viral disease does not have a vaccine available?