The K M Links Game - November 2024 Week...
Quizzes & Puzzles5 mins ago
Our 5 year old granddaughter is just getting over Chicken Pox, so we're expecting her little sister of 2 yrs to get it now.
However, our daughter (their Mummy) has phoned to say she's been to the doc's & has been told she's now got it (our daughter I mean not the 2 yr old).
Both our daughters had chicken pox as children & I didn't think you could get it twice. Has anyone else?
No best answer has yet been selected by smudge. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have never heard of that either, but I searched Wikipedia which said that you usually develop immunity. However a Danish site called netdoktor, (I know you won't understand the site , just wanted to give a source) says that you always develop immunity but that if you have had chicken pox you can get shingles from the same virus. So I suppose to get one or the other is possible. Someone else can probably say something much more satisfactory and intelligent about this.
Hope they all get well soon!
Apparently its possible to get measles, chicken pox and mumps more than once, though we always believed that you build immunity against it once you've had it. No one in my family has had any of these more than once, but I've heard of people who have - one chap I know said he'd had mumps thrice (as a child)!!
When your immune system is challenged by a virus such as varicella, which is responsible for chicken pox, the usual response is two-fold. You will produce antibodies to fight off the virus and you also produce "memory cells" - these are b lymphocytes, which then remain dormant until challenged again by the same virus. They then multiply rapidly and cause antibodies to be formed, fighting off the virus and preventing reinfection. This is the basis for vaccination ( which "primes" the immune response by producing b lymphocytes, ready to ward off any wild type infection.
However, very rarely, if for some reason, someone is immunosuppressed (which may be due to being unwell from another illness, or drug therapy, or even being "run down") at the time of the first viral infection, although they may produce antibodies to fight off that infection, they may not produce memory cells. Therefore, when challanged by the same virus a second time, the body in effect sees it as a new virus, hence a second bout of chickenpox.
HTH
Hi spudqueen - Chicken Pox, Mumps, etc., the joys of Motherhood eh!!
I can't imagine what it's like to get it as an adult - even talking about it makes me itch all over! Our daughter has been itching all day & no doubt will tonight, so I've just offered to have the little one who also has it, to stay with us overnight to give her a break. Well that's what Nanny & Grandad's are for I s'pose!
Take care - we soldier on............!