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What is a Live Vaccine?

Tricia Christensen
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Updated: May 17, 2024
Views: 15,248
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Many types of vaccinations involve injecting dead parts or wholes of germ cells into people or animals to provoke a small immune response. In theory and in practice, this form of vaccination proves very successful, and when people or animals come in contact with the live germ cells, their bodies are already immune to them. Another form of vaccination is the live vaccine. This is injecting living parts or all of germ cells into a person/animal body to create immunity too.

Most live vaccine types, and there are many, are also called live attenuated vaccinations. This process of attenuation is extremely important because it makes injecting people with live germs to get immunity possible. Ordinarily, exposure to live germ cells would just end up making people sick with the virus or bacteria. With attenuation, this risk sharply reduces for healthy populations.

Essentially, attenuation is a process by which the germ or infectious parts of the virus or bacterium are reduced. This could be done in several ways, including placing a virus in an egg, often chicken, that contains an embryo, or infecting animals with a virus because they can fight it and change it. In this process, the virus or bacterium changes so that it is highly unlikely, but not impossible, to infect someone who receives a vaccination with the new virus form, but the vaccination will still confer immunity to people who get. The live vaccine is still very much live virus, but has changed into a form both less viral and more beneficial.

There are a number of vaccinations that are offered in live vaccine form. Oral polio has made use of the live poliovirus for many decades. Recently there has been a switch to more people receiving inactivated or dead poliovirus, due to concerns about possible contraction of the disease. It was always a risk when the vaccine was developed, but risk tended to be much lower than potential risk associated with contracting polio from a wild polio source. Usually infection with a live attenuated virus is milder than infection via contact with wild virus.

Other live vaccine forms include the nasal spray that is used as an alternative to the flu shot. This is an attenuated virus too. Some additional examples include chicken pox or varicella shots, measles, mumps, rubella (MMR) and vaccines against some forms of tuberculosis.

While most people are able to handle live vaccine shots, some people are told not to use them. People who have impaired immune systems are generally not advised to get live attenuated vaccinations. These pose heightened risk for contraction of illness.

Live vaccines potentially carry the risk of causing infection among people in perfect health too. Those concerned about this issue should speak to doctors regarding statistical chances of infection by vaccine compared to statistical likelihood of becoming extremely ill by not possessing immunity. One other thing people should know before getting a live vaccine is if they are allergic to eggs. Attenuation processes frequently use eggs and people may have allergic reactions to injections with certain live vaccines if they have previous egg allergies.

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Tricia Christensen
By Tricia Christensen
With a Literature degree from Sonoma State University and years of experience as a WiseGeek contributor, Tricia Christensen is based in Northern California and brings a wealth of knowledge and passion to her writing. Her wide-ranging interests include reading, writing, medicine, art, film, history, politics, ethics, and religion, all of which she incorporates into her informative articles. Tricia is currently working on her first novel.

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Discussion Comments
By anon243393 — On Jan 27, 2012

I am taking Remicade for crohn's. Will the flu shot be OK?

By MissDaphne — On May 20, 2011

@SailorJerry - You could check the CDC and March of Dimes websites. I know the CDC has a lot of information about each vaccine, but I don't know if they have a special list of live virus vaccines.

I do know that the first live vaccine your baby will be offered is rotavirus (brand name Rotarix). Because it's live and oral, babies can actually shed the virus in their diapers. My pediatrician said, though, that only people with compromised immune systems needed to be really worried about that aspect of the live vaccine.

By SailorJerry — On May 18, 2011

Is there a list of live vaccines? I have a baby on the way and the number of vaccines is making my head spin trying to figure out how to handle them.

Tricia Christensen
Tricia Christensen
With a Literature degree from Sonoma State University and years of experience as a WiseGeek contributor, Tricia...
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