To begin with, vaccines are based on the principle that once your body has acquired a specific disease and fights it off, it then becomes immune to it. If you were to come into contact with the same infection again, normally, your body would then be able to recognize it and fight it off. Vaccines use the same idea by tricking our bodies into thinking they have the actual disease when in reality they are only fighting off a weakened or even dead form of it. Once we receive the vaccination, our body goes through a process called “immune response” in which our immune system detects the antigens in our body. Vaccines contain just the right amount of antigens for us to experience the immune response without the antigens multiplying into a vicious infection. Our body then begins producing proteins known as antibodies that travel through our blood and fight off the antigens. Antibodies are created by white blood cells known as B cells that serve primarily to produce specific antibodies that fight off the correlating antigens. Afterwards, our body stores these antibodies in case we are ever actually exposed to the full version of the infection at a later time. Thus, immunizations prevent the infections because our body is already prepared to fight the antigens for that
To begin with, vaccines are based on the principle that once your body has acquired a specific disease and fights it off, it then becomes immune to it. If you were to come into contact with the same infection again, normally, your body would then be able to recognize it and fight it off. Vaccines use the same idea by tricking our bodies into thinking they have the actual disease when in reality they are only fighting off a weakened or even dead form of it. Once we receive the vaccination, our body goes through a process called “immune response” in which our immune system detects the antigens in our body. Vaccines contain just the right amount of antigens for us to experience the immune response without the antigens multiplying into a vicious infection. Our body then begins producing proteins known as antibodies that travel through our blood and fight off the antigens. Antibodies are created by white blood cells known as B cells that serve primarily to produce specific antibodies that fight off the correlating antigens. Afterwards, our body stores these antibodies in case we are ever actually exposed to the full version of the infection at a later time. Thus, immunizations prevent the infections because our body is already prepared to fight the antigens for that