Where does the medicine *go* when you get an injection/shot?

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When you get a shot, like a flu or COVID vaccination for example, they typically put it in your upper arm or your thigh. Are they just sort of injecting it into the muscle? Or into a vein? Either way, where does it *go*?
I have seen videos of when people get things like local anesthetic where the skin starts to balloon out where they put the liquid. Does that sort of thing happen just deeper in the body? I know our body is mostly liquid but does it just absorb? Maybe redistributed ?

In: Biology

7 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Your immune system responds to vaccines by recruiting immune cells to the injection site that pick up antigen, and then go to the nearest draining lymph node, which is basically a factory for antibody production.

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