Profile
Varicella is the virus that causes chickenpox. It usually
attacks just once in a lifetime, and most often sets its
sights on kids. It’s best known for making its victims
itch like crazy from the rash of blisters that it causes.
Once it gets going, chickenpox is very contagious,
and can catch up with anyone in its path who’s not
immunized. Before the vaccine, about 100 people
in the U.S. died each year from chickenpox.
Fortunately, you can make yourself nearly invincible
against chickenpox if you get the vaccine.
Powers & Abilities
Greatest Strength: Extremely contagious.
Chickenpox’s strongest power is in making victims feel sick, itchy, and miserable for a week or so. From time to time, chickenpox also pulls out some other tricks, like causing pneumonia and swelling of the brain. Luckily, only a few people ever see this side of chickenpox.
Sinister Tricks: (1) Chickenpox sneaks in without any symptoms, so that people with chickenpox are most contagious before they even know they have it—1 to 2 days before the “pox” actually appear. (2) People help chickenpox do its dirty work by scratching their itchy blisters, which spreads infected fluid and makes more blisters. (3) Sometimes, chickenpox goes underground, hiding in your nerve cells for years. Then, it can come back in adults and cause a really painful disease called shingles.
At first, chickenpox sneaks in disguised as a cold. But soon it stamps its personal trademark on its targets—a red, itchy rash of blisters, usually showing up first on the face and chest. Once it’s made its mark, it adds high fever, and blisters spread over the rest of the body. In severe cases, blisters even show up in the mouth and ears.
preferred Method of Attack
Chickenpox is an “air and surface” attacker. The cough or sneeze of
an infected person sends droplets into the air and onto surfaces.
Unsuspecting people then take in the virus through the mouth or
nose—either from droplets flying through the air from a sneeze or
cough, or when they touch a surface that has droplets on it and then
later touch their mouths or noses.
Known Weaknessess
Greatest Weakness: Nearly powerless to penetrate the defenses of the vaccine.
Once someone is infected, chickenpox cannot be stopped, but its symptoms can be treated. Cool baths and calamine lotion (which has special mineral oils that treat rashes, bumps, and bruises) can help people feel less itchy.
Preferred Victims
Chickenpox focuses on kids, attacking mostly those younger
than 15. Adults who do get infected, though, are more
likely than kids to have serious complications.
Precautions for the Public
Help shield yourself and others by getting vaccinated and putting
chickenpox out of business.
Area of Operations
Chickenpox operates globally, infecting people in all parts of the
world. Chickenpox spreads quickly and easily within a group, and loves
to come out when the weather starts to get nice at the end of
winter and the start of spring.
Criminal Record
Chickenpox has been doing its dirty work for a long time. The disease was first
described more than 400 years ago. In 1767, an English doctor, William
Heberden, realized two important things. First, he showed
that chickenpox is different from the more deadly disease, smallpox. Second, he
showed that once a person has had chickenpox, that person usually never gets it again
(In other words, they’re immune for life). The Chickenpox vaccine was first used in
Japan and Korea in 1988, and became available in the U.S. in 1995.