1. Chickenpox
Chickenpox is most common in children and is usually not serious. In teenagers, adults, pregnant women, and people who have impaired immune systems, chickenpox can be more serious.
Healthline.com (OMS Preferred Provider)
2. Chickenpox: MedlinePlus
Chickenpox is an infectious disease caused by the varicella virus. Most cases occur in children under age 15 but older children and adults can get it. It spreads very easily from one child to another.
MedlinePlus (Offsite)
3. Index of /html
Index of /html
www.agsdus.org
4. Hardin MD : Chickenpox Pictures from CDC
Chickenpox Pictures from CDC To do the search that retrieves these pictures, go to PHIL & search for: chickenpox. The URL for this page is http://www.lib.uiowa.edu/hardin/md/cdc/chickenpox.html...
www.lib.uiowa.edu
5. Index of /gladstone/html
Index of /gladstone/html
www.gladstone.ucsf.edu
6. Index of /NeuroChem/kinase_html_fldr
Index of /NeuroChem/kinase_html_fldr
rsb.info.nih.gov
7. Index of /manuals/schrodinger/html/quickstart
Index of /manuals/schrodinger/html/quickstart
bcr.musc.edu
8. Chickenpox
Chickenpox is caused by a virus, the varicella-zoster virus (VZV). VZV causes both varicella (chickenpox) and zoster (shingles). VZV is a member of the herpes virus family, similar to herpes simplex virus.
www.armymedicine.army.mil
9. Chickenpox
Chickenpox is one of the classic childhood diseases. A child or adult with chickenpox may develop hundreds of itchy, fluid-filled blisters that burst and form crusts. Chickenpox is caused by a virus.
www.uhseast.com
10. Chickenpox
Chickenpox is a common illness among kids, particularly those under age 12. An itchy rash of spots that look like blisters can appear all over the body and be accompanied by flu-like symptoms. Symptoms usually go away without treatment, but becaus...
kidshealth.org