The early symptoms in young adults and adults are nausea, losing appetite, throbbing pain in muscles, and headache. This is followed by oral sores, malaise, and a low-grade fever that indicates that a person has the infection. In children the actual disease comes before the early symptoms, and the first sign is the rash or sores in the oral cavity. The rash starts as small red dots on the face, scalp, torso, upper arms and legs and these rashes, over the time-scale of 10-12 hours, turn into small bumps, pustules and blisters, followed by the formation of scabs. At the time blisters are visible major itching is in place. Blisters may also form on the palms, soles of the feet and the private areas. Often, the seeable evidence of infections emerges in the oral cavity and the tonsil areas, forming small ulcers that can hurt or be itchy or both. The infection normally resolves by itself which takes 2-3 weeks. The rash, however, last for up to a month, the infectious stage doesn't longer than 1-2 weeks. Chicken Pox is rarely fatal, its usually for serious in adult men than in adult women or children. Pregnant women who aren't vaccinated and those with a restrained immune system are in a high risk of complications.