Herpes zoster, more commonly known as Shingles, is a painful, viral disease that often causes the patient to develop a blistering rash on one side of their body. Shingles is caused by the same virus that causes chickenpox and occurs in people who previously developed chickenpox.
What is Shingles?
If you had chickenpox when you were young, the herpes zoster virus that caused the itchy rash and made you feel horrible could still be lying dormant in your nerve tissues. The virus can wake up or reactivate many years later. When it does, it’s called shingles.
What are the Symptoms of Shingles?
According to the National Institute on Aging, the symptoms of shingles may include:
- A rash that oozes or weeps, typically seen in a stripe along one side of the body or face
- Itching, burning, or tingling skin or shooting pain upon touch – possibly before the appearance of the rash
You may also experience fever and chills, headache, and nausea. Typically, shingles blisters will scab over in a week to 10 days, and the rash will resolve in less than a month.
Who Gets Shingles?
Everyone who developed chickenpox has a risk of developing shingles — however, your risk of developing shingles increases as you get older. Nearly half of all cases of shingles happens to patients over the age of 60.
If you have HIV, cancer or other condition or disease that weakens the immune system you also have a greater risk of developing shingles as do those who are being treated with medications that suppress the immune system.
Complications of Shingles
For most people, shingles will resolve normally, but for about 10 percent of the population, complications like postherpetic neuralgia (PHN) will develop. PHN causes damage to nerve fibers which may result in severe and prolonged pain in the area where the shingles rash developed. People who suffer this complication may suffer pain for week, months, or even years.
PHN can reduce a person’s quality of life and interfere with how they go about their normal daily activities. It can cause depression, weight loss, sleeplessness, and anxiety and some patients may require medicinal therapy with anticonvulsants, analgesics, steroids, or antidepressants to help with the side effects of PHN.
Because there is a risk of vision loss with shingles, anyone who develops the rash on their face should get medical attention as quickly as possible.
There are vaccines that can help reduce your risk of suffering shingles and the complications that it can lead to. Shingrix can be given to healthy adults aged 50 years or older in two separate doses. The second dose must be given about six months after the first to work properly. In fact, the vaccine is over 90 percent effective against shingles and PHN when given in two properly spaced doses. Zostavax is an older vaccine that is used when Shingrix is not available or when the patient is allergic to the ingredients in Shingrix.
Be aware that even though shingles is not as contagious as chickenpox, the rash should be covered to decrease further the chance of spreading it to someone else.