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When a Doctor or a pyshist inject a Vaccine in your body its just a wekaer verson of the virus thats going in what if it gets stronger and mulipulates when the real virus gets into you wouldn't it make the Real Virus Stronger sence the weaker on is in play?

2007-06-28 15:18:40 · 8 answers · asked by ? 1 in Science & Mathematics Biology

8 answers

Nope...it does not..
When a PHYSICIAN, NURSE, TECHNICIAN, or Medical Doctor apply inactivated (dead), attenuated or fragmented viruses in anybodies body, we are boosting the production of specific proteins called inmunoglobulins, that will reject or neutralize that particular virus....
Thats what we call antigenicity (the capability of the body, to produce defenses, or antibodies against that specific virus)

Nowadays, very rarely, attenuated viruses are used, but rather the small fragmented version of the virus particles (such as it happens in vacines against human papiloma viruses)....

Those vaccines doesnt make anything stronger nor weaker....it just gives to the person (or animal for that particular case), receiving it, the capability to manufacture Immunoglobuline proteins of the "M" or macro type, or the "g" permanent type..
It does not make the virus any weaker, or stronger (it has nothing to do with that) it only neutralizes such virus.....avoiding the disease before the virus spreads inside of the body,,,,(that is the aim of such vaccines, most of them protect the body for a lifetime)...however, the virus itself, does not become stronger nor weaker.....nothing to do with that,,,,,

2007-06-28 16:23:50 · answer #1 · answered by Sehr_Klug 50 6 · 1 0

A vaccine for a virus uses generally uses killed virus or weakened live virus. The virus in the vaccine is the same as the virus that can cause disease, but the virus is no longer capable of causing disease in healthy humans. The vaccine provides your body with a sample of the virus so your body can make antibodies to it. Then, when you encounter the real virus, your body already has antibodies and can fight off the invader.

In the scenario you describe, where the vaccine virus and the disease-causing virus are in you at the same time, you have a significantly greater chance of getting the disease because you didn't have the chance to make the antibodies yet. However, the presence of the 2 viruses in your body won't cause the disease-causing virus to be stronger.

Additional info: There are several viral vaccines commonly used these days: influenza, chicken pox, MMR (measles, mumps, rubella), HepB (Hepatitis B), polio. One that is no longer given is smallpox, as this is one of the great successes of vaccination; the smallpox virus has been completely eliminated.

2007-06-28 15:47:01 · answer #2 · answered by N E 7 · 0 0

2

2016-08-24 00:44:31 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

A vaccine arouses your body's defenses into making an anti-virus which is targeted directly at the virus. The vaccine is tested before wide spread use to make sure it does not cause the disease and is stable. And if a virus mutates (not "mulipulates") the result weakens the virus most of the time. By the time the full virus is invading, the weaker one has been killed off by the created antivirus.

2007-06-28 15:26:53 · answer #4 · answered by Mike1942f 7 · 0 0

Vaccinations are usually a form of virus that is very similar in structure to the virus that can do us harm.
It is not the same virus, nor is it a 'weakened' form, it is different.
The body will produce antibodies that can kill off this virus. If you then get inficted with the harmful one, the body will recognise it as the previous virus and release the antibodies that it has previously designed and kill it off.

2007-06-28 15:29:26 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

No. because, for example when the doctor injects you a vaccine like polio, it means that the virus is already harmless. and in that case you will not suffer from polio anymore because the harmless virus that was injected to you is permanent and will protect ur immune system frm suffering from this kind of disease.....But you might have feaver after your vaccination

2007-06-28 15:25:24 · answer #6 · answered by R.C. 3 · 0 0

vaccines are inactivated virus (with a warning that a very small percentage of people will develop infection from the vaccination...). the purpose of injecting ourselves with vaccines is to expose our immune systems to antigens (i.e., "dead" virus) to which our bodies create anti-bodies--roving, defending cells that are highly specific to their antigen. why do we want antibodies? well, if we have antibodies then our immune system is "ready" to fight a potential infection--sort of like having scouts on look-out. since we have these "scouts" looking out out for invaders, should there be an invasion the scouts are out there to "hold the fort" until reserves are called in. without antibodies, our immune systems will be caught off-guard; while virus are hijacking our cells to make virus factories (creating an infection) our immune system is playing catch-up to defend/conquer the invading virus.


eh. stupidy analogy.

2007-06-28 15:37:30 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2014-08-29 03:37:35 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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