Vaccinia is the condition resulting from infection with the Vaccinia virus. Vaccinia virus is closely related to the virus that causes cowpox. It is in the pox family of viruses, which also includes smallpox.
Vaccinia is so mild that it is typically asymptomatic in healthy individuals, but may causes a mild rash and fever, with an extremely low rate of fatality.
The body's immune response to vaccinia also immunizes against smallpox, and for this reason, vaccinia is used as a live-virus innoculator against smallpox. Vaccinia smallpox vaccine does not contain and cannot cause smallpox, but approximately one in one million individials will develop a fatal response to the vaccination.
Vaccinia vaccination was the first example of vaccination. Prior to the use of vaccinia, smallpox epidemics were controlled somewhat through the use of inoculation -- a deliberate, minor exposure to the disease. Vaccination derives its name from Vaccinia.
External links
Smallpox and Vaccinia (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/books/bv.fcgi?rid=vacc.chapter.3)
Cowpox virus strain GRI-90 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=pubmed&dopt=Abstract&list_uids=14718625) is the closest known match to vaccinia.
vaccinia, the infectious agent of cowpox, which, when
coding for a part of a virus or a bacterium that is recognizable by the immune system is inserted and
Dissenters falsely suggest that modern vaccines might result in outbreaks of smallpox (in fact, they contain no smallpoxvirus: they contain live vacciniavirus), and suggest that infections in the past originated (as in the small vaccinia outbreak in