"Shingles (herpes zoster)"

   "Shingles (herpes zoster)"

    Introduction

    When the itchy red spots of childhood chickenpox* disappear and life returns to normal,
    the battle with the virus that causes chickenpox seems won. But for too many of us this
    triumph of immune system over virus is temporary. The virus has not been destroyed
    but remains dormant in our nerve cells, ready to strike again later in life. This second
    eruption of the chickenpox virus is the disease called shingles or herpes-zoster .

    "I was having exams at college and I got a rash in a band around one side of my waist.
    The spots were very painful. At first I thought it was chickenpox, but I'd had that years
    before," recalls a young woman who had shingles in her twenties.

    The young woman's memory was correct. She did have chickenpox as a child. You
    cannot develop shingles unless you have had an earlier exposure to chickenpox, and
    most people who get chickenpox are at risk for shingles. The woman had the typical
    one-sided band of rash and pain of this common neurological disorder. Her age was
    unusual, however.

    While young people do develop shingles, the disease most often strikes after age 40.
    But since shingles is so common, affecting an estimated one-quarter of Americans at
    some point during their lifetimes, cases in young people are not rare.


    What is Shingles?

    Scientists call the virus that causes chickenpox/shingles varicella-zoster virus or VZV.
    The word "varicella" is derived from "variola," the Latin word for smallpox, another
    infectious disease that can resemble chickenpox. (Smallpox is a highly contagious
    and often fatal disease that has disfigured or killed millions of people, especially
    during the Middle Ages.) “Zoster” is the Greek word for girdle; shingles often produces
    a girdle or belt of blisters or lesions around one side of the waist. This striking pattern
    also underlies the condition's common name: shingles comes from “cingulum,” the
    Latin word for belt or girdle.

    VZV belongs to a group of viruses called herpesviruses. This group includes the
    herpes simplex virus that causes cold sores, fever blisters, mononucleosis, genital
    herpes (a sexually transmitted disease), and Epstein-Barr virus involved in infectious
    mononucleosis. Like VZV, other herpesviruses can hide in the nervous system after an
    initial infection and then travel down nerve cell fibers to cause a renewed infection.
    Repeated episodes of cold sores on the lips are the most common example.

    As early as 1909, scientists suspected that the viruses causing chickenpox and
    shingles were one and the same. In the 1920s and 1930s, the case was strengthened
    by an experiment in which children were inoculated with fluid from shingles blisters.
    Within 2 weeks, about half of the children developed chickenpox. Finally, in 1958,
    detailed analyses of the viruses taken from patients with either chickenpox or shingles
    confirmed that the viruses were identical.

    Virtually all adults in the United States have had chickenpox, even if it was so mild as to
    pass unnoticed, and thus may develop shingles later in life. In the original exposure to
    VZV (chickenpox), some of the virus particles leave the blood and settle into clusters of
    nerve cells (neurons ) called sensory ganglia, where they remain for many years in an
    inactive (latent) form. The sensory ganglia, which are adjacent to the spinal cord and
    brain, relay information to the brain about what the body is sensing - heat, cold,
    touch, pain.

    When the VZV reactivates, it spreads down the long nerve fibers (axons) that extend
    from the sensory cell bodies to the skin. The viruses multiply, the telltale rash erupts,
    and the person now has herpes-zoster, or shingles. With shingles, the nervous system
    is more deeply involved than it was during the bout with chickenpox, and the symptoms
    are often more complex and severe.


    Who is at Risk for Shingles?

    About 25 percent of all adults, mostly otherwise healthy, will get shingles during their
    lifetimes, usually after age 40. The incidence increases with age so that shingles is
    10 times more likely to occur in adults over 60 than in children under 10. People with
    compromised immune systems - from use of immunosuppressive medications such as
    prednisone, from serious illnesses such as cancer, or from infection with HIV - are at
    special risk of developing shingles. These individuals also can have re-eruptions and
    some may have shingles that never heals. Most people who get shingles re-boost their
    immunity to VZV and will not get the disease for another few decades.

    Youngsters whose mothers had chickenpox late in pregnancy - 5 to 21 days before
    giving birth - or who had chickenpox in infancy, have an increased risk of pediatric
    shingles. Sometimes these children are born with chickenpox or develop a typical
    case within a few days.


    What are the Symptoms of Shingles?

    The first sign of shingles is often burning or tingling pain, or itch, in one particular
    location on only one side of the body. After several days or a week, a rash of fluid-
    filled blisters, similar to chickenpox, appears in one area on one side of the body.
    Recent studies have shown that subtle cases of shingles with only a few lesions, or
    none, are more common than previously thought. These cases will usually remain
    unrecognized. Cases without any known lesions are known as zoster sine herpete.

    Shingles pain can be mild or intense. Some people have mostly itching; some feel
    pain from the gentlest touch or breeze. The most common location for shingles is
    a band, called a dermatome, spanning one side of the trunk around the waistline.
    The second most common location is on one side of the face around the eye and
    on the forehead. However, shingles can involve any part of the body. The number
    of lesions is variable. Some rashes merge and produce an area that looks like a
    severe burn. Other patients may have just a few scattered lesions that don't cause
    severe symptoms.

    For most healthy people, shingles rashes heal within a few weeks, the pain and itch
    that accompany the lesions subside, and the blisters leave no scars. Other people
    may have sensory symptoms that linger for a few months.


    How Should Shingles Be Treated?

    Shingles attacks can be made less severe and shorter by using prescription antiviral
    drugs: acyclovir, valacyclovir, or famcyclovir. Acyclovir is available in a generic form,
    but the pills must be taken five times a day, whereas valacyclovir and famcyclovir pills
    are taken three times a day. It is important not to miss any doses and not to stop taking
    the medication early. Antiviral drugs can reduce by about half the risk of being left with
    postherpetic neuralgia, which is chronic pain that can last for months or years after the
    shingles rash clears. Doctors recommend starting antiviral drugs at the first sign of the
    shingles rash, or even if the telltale symptoms indicate that a rash is about to erupt.
    Even if a patient is not seen by a doctor at the beginning of the illness, it may still be
    useful to start antiviral medications if new lesions are still forming. Other treatments
    to consider are anti-inflammatory corticosteroids such as prednisone. These are
    routinely used when the eye or other facial nerves are affected.


    Is Shingles Contagious?

    A person with a shingles rash can pass the virus to someone, usually a child, who
    has never had chickenpox, but the child will develop chickenpox, not shingles. The
    child must come into direct contact with the open sores of the shingles rash.  Merely
    being in the same room with a shingles patient will not cause the child to catch
    chickenpox because during a shingles infection the virus is not normally in the lungs
    and therefore can't be spread through the air.

    People with chickenpox cannot communicate shingles to someone else although they
    can of course pass the chickenpox on to someone who has never had chickenpox.  In
    cases of chickenpox, the virus can become airborne because it is found in the upper
    respiratory tract.

    Shingles occurs when an unknown trigger causes the virus hiding inside the person's
    body to become activated.  Unlike chickenpox, shingles can't be "caught" from someone
    else.


    Can Shingles Be Prevented?

    Chickenpox vaccine

    Immunization with the varicella vaccine (or chickenpox vaccine) - now recommended
    in the United States for all children between 18 months and adolescence - can protect
    children from getting chickenpox. People who have been vaccinated against chickenpox
    are less likely to get shingles because the weak, “attenuated” strain of virus used in the
    chickenpox vaccine is less likely to survive in the body over decades.  But a definitive
    answer to the question of whether shingles can occur later in life in a person vaccinated
    against chickenpox will only be provided when enough data have been gathered over
    the next several decades.

    Some scientists believe that immunizing children against chickenpox increases the risk
    of shingles in adults who were not themselves immunized during childhood. This is
    because when adults care for children sick with chickenpox, it reboosts their own
    immunity that keeps the virus in their nerve cells from reactivating as shingles. With
    fewer children coming down with chickenpox, there are fewer opportunities for this
    "reboosting" of adult immunity, and so there may be more shingles cases for the next
    40-50 years.

    Shingles vaccine

    In May 2006, the Food and Drug Administration approved a VZV vaccine (Zostavax)
    for use in people 60 and older who have had chickenpox. When the vaccine becomes
    more widely available, many older adults will for the first time have a means of
    preventing shingles.

    Researchers found that giving older adults the vaccine reduced the expected number
    of cases of shingles by half. And in people who still got the disease despite immunization,
    the severity and complications of shingles were dramatically reduced. The Shingles
    Prevention Study - a collaboration between the Department of Veterans Affairs, the
    National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, and Merck & Co., Inc. - involved
    more than 38,000 veterans aged 60 and older. The purpose was to find out how safe
    the vaccine is, and if it can prevent shingles. Half the study participants were vaccinated
    with a more potent version of the chickenpox vaccine, developed specifically for use in
    adults, and half received a placebo vaccine. Neither volunteers nor researchers knew
    if a particular subject had gotten active or placebo vaccine until after the end of the
    study (a double-blind study).

    During more than 3 years of followup, the vaccine reduced shingles cases by 51
    percent; 642 cases of shingles developed in the placebo group compared with only
    315 in the vaccinated group. Pain and discomfort were reduced by 61 percent in
    people who received the active vaccine but still got shingles. The vaccine also
    reduced the number of cases of postherpetic neuralgia by two-thirds compared with
    the placebo.

    The shingles vaccine is only a preventive therapy and not a treatment for those
    who already have shingles or postherpetic neuralgia.


    What is Postherpetic Neuralgia?

    Sometimes, particularly in older people, shingles pain persists long after the rash has
    healed. This postherpetic neuralgia can be mild or severe - the most severe cases
    can lead to insomnia, weight loss, depression, and disability. Postherpetic neuralgia
    is not directly life-threatening. About a dozen medications in four categories have
    been shown in clinical trials to provide some pain relief.

    These include:

    Tricyclic antidepressants (TCAs): TCAs are often the first type of drug given to patients
    suffering from postherpetic neuralgia. The TCA amitryptiline was commonly prescribed
    in the past, but although effective, it has a high rate of side effects. Desipramine and
    nortriptyline have fewer side effects and are therefore better choices for older adults,
    the most likely group to have postherpetic neuralgia.

    Common side effects of TCAs include dry eyes and mouth, constipation, and
    grogginess. People with heart arrhythmias, previous heart attacks, or narrow
    angle glaucoma should usually use a different class of drugs.

    Anticonvulsants: Some drugs that reduce seizures can also treat postherpetic neuralgia
    because seizures and pain both involve abnormally increased firing of nerve cells. An
    antiseizure medication, carbamazepine, is effective for postherpetic neuralgia but has
    rare, potentially dangerous side effects so a newer anticonvulsant, gabapentin, is far
    more often prescribed. Side effects of the drug include drowsiness or confusion,
    dizziness, and sometimes ankle swelling.

    Opioids: Opioids are strong pain medications used for all types of pain. They include
    oxycodone, morphine, tramadol, and methadone. Opioids can have side effects -
    including drowsiness, mental dulling, and constipation - and can be addictive, so their
    use must be monitored carefully in those with a history of addiction.

    Topical local anesthetics: Local anesthetics applied directly to the skin of the
    painful area affected by postherpetic neuralgia are also effective. Lidocaine, the
    most commonly prescribed, is available in cream, gel, or spray form. It is also available
    in a patch that has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for use
    specifically in postherpetic neuralgia. With topical local anesthetics, the drug stays
    in the skin and therefore does not cause problems such as drowsiness or constipation.
    Capsaicin cream may be somewhat effective and is available over the counter, but
    most people find that it causes severe burning pain during application.

    Postherpetic itch

    The itch that sometimes occurs during or after shingles can be quite severe and
    painful. Clinical experience suggests that postherpetic itch is harder to treat than
    postherpetic neuralgia. Topical local anesthetics (which numb the skin) provide
    substantial relief to some patients. Since postherpetic itch typically develops in
    skin that has severe sensory loss, it is particularly important to avoid scratching.
    Scratching numb skin too long or too hard can cause injury.


    What are Other Complications of Shingles?

    People with ophthalmic shingles -- lesions in or around the eye and forehead --
    can suffer painful eye infections, and in some cases immediate or delayed vision loss.
    People with shingles in or near the eye should see an ophthalmologist immediately.
    Shingles infections within or near the ear (Ramsay-Hunt syndrome) can cause hearing
    or balance problems as well as weakness of the muscles on the affected side of the
    face. In rare cases, shingles can spread into the brain or spinal cord and cause serious
    complications such as stroke or meningitis (an infection of the membranes outside the
    brain and spinal cord). People with shingles need to seek immediate medical evaluation
    if they notice neurological symptoms outside the region of the primary shingles attack.
    People who are immunosuppressed, whether from diseases such as HIV or medications,
    have an increased risk of serious complications from shingles. Most commonly, they get
    shingles that spreads to involve more parts of the body, or shingles rashes that persist
    for long periods or return frequently. Many such patients are helped by taking antiviral
    medications on a continuous basis.


    Can Infection with VZV During Pregnancy Harm the Baby?

    Many mothers-to-be are concerned about any infection contracted during pregnancy,
    and rightly so because some infections can be transmitted across the mother's
    bloodstream to the fetus or can be acquired by the baby during the birth process.
    VZV infection during pregnancy poses some risk to the unborn child, depending upon
    the stage of pregnancy. During the first 30 weeks, maternal chickenpox may, in some
    cases, lead to congenital malformations. Such cases are rare and experts differ in their
    opinions on how great the risk is. Most experts agree that shingles in a pregnant woman,
    a rare event, is even less likely to cause harm to the unborn child.

    If a pregnant woman gets chickenpox between 21 to 5 days before giving birth, her
    newborn can have chickenpox at birth or develop it within a few days. But the time
    lapse between the start of the mother's illness and the birth of the baby generally
    allows the mother's immune system to react and produce antibodies to fight the virus.
    These antibodies can be transmitted to the unborn child and thus help fight the
    infection. Still, a small percent of the babies exposed to chickenpox in the 21 to 5
    days before birth develop shingles in the first 5 years of life because the newborn's
    immune system is not yet fully functional and capable of keeping the virus latent.

    What if the mother contracts chickenpox at the time of birth? In that case the mother's
    immune system has not had a chance to mobilize its forces. And although some of the
    mother's antibodies will be transmitted to the newborn via the placenta, the newborn will
    have little ability to fight off the attack because its immune system is immature. If these
    babies develop chickenpox as a result, it can be fatal. They are given zoster immune
    globulin, a preparation made from the antibody-rich blood of adults who have recently
    recovered from chickenpox or shingles, to lessen the severity of their chickenpox.


    What Research is Being Done?

    Because of nervous system involvement, the chickenpox/shingles virus is studied by
    the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, a part of the National
    Institutes of Health. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, the
    National Cancer Institute, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Eye Institute
    also support research on shingles.

    Medical research on shingles has two main goals. The first is to develop drugs to fight
    the disease and to prevent or treat its complications, especially postherpetic neuralgia.
    The second is to understand the disease well enough to prevent it, especially in people
    at high risk. Scientists need to learn much more about the VZV, particularly how it
    becomes latent in the body and what induces it to become active again. Scientists
    suspect that the VZV DNA is inserted into one of the chromosomes of the nerve cell -
    the units that house the cell's own genetic material.

    A healthy immune system protects against all kinds of diseases, but people with faulty
    immunity are vulnerable to many illnesses, including shingles. Antibodies, one of the
    immune system's major defense mechanisms against infection, are not very helpful
    against shingles. The immune cells that appear to combat shingles are two types of
    #016EBB blood cells: T lymphocytes and macrophages. Scientists are trying to find ways
    to boost the activity of these cells - especially in patients at high risk for severe or
    disseminated shingles (a rare condition in which the virus spreads to other areas of
    the body, sometimes vital areas such as the blood or the lungs).

    Other researchers are studying how VZV infects neurons. In particular, they are looking
    at how the virus assembles in and exits out of nerve cells, with the goal of blocking this
    important step. In another study, researchers are developing animal models to evaluate
    VZV vaccines. Their findings may lead to improved vaccines that protect against varicella
    or prevent it from establishing latent infection or reactivation to cause shingles and
    postherpetic neuralgia.

    Other research is aimed at finding new methods for identifying the biological differences
    between people who suffer from or escape long-term postherpetic neuralgia pain after
    shingles. The goals of this research are to identify ways to reduce the risk of
    postherpetic neuralgia after shingles.


    “On Catching Chickenpox . . . but not Catching Shingles”

    Chickenpox and shingles are caused by the same virus - varicella-zoster (VZV). When
    a person, usually a child, who has not received the chickenpox vaccine (which became
    available in the United States in 1995) is exposed to VZV, he or she usually develops
    chickenpox, a highly contagious disease that can be spread by breathing as well as by
    contact with the rash. The infection begins in the upper respiratory tract where the virus
    incubates for 15 days or more. VZV then spreads to the bloodstream and migrates to the
    skin, giving rise to the familiar chickenpox rash.

    In contrast, you can't catch shingles from someone else. You must already have been
    exposed to chickenpox and harbor the virus in your nervous system to develop shingles.
    When reactivated, the virus travels down nerves to the skin, causing the painful shingles
    rash. In shingles, the virus does not normally spread to the bloodstream or lungs, so the
    virus is not shed in air. Because the shingles rash contains active virus particles,
    someone who has never had chickenpox can catch it from exposure to a
    shingles rash.


    Glossary

    acyclovir - one of three available antiviral drugs that can reduce the severity and
    duration of a shingles attack if given soon after onset.

    capsaicin - an active ingredient in hot chili peppers used in topical ointments to relieve
    pain. It appears to work by reducing a chemical substance found at nerve endings and
    involved in transmitting pain signals to the brain. While somewhat effective for postherpetic
    neuralgia, it can cause severe burning in some patients.

    carbamazapine - a drug that works both as an anticonvulsant and a pain reliever.

    chickenpox - an acute contagious disease that usually occurs in children and is
    caused by the varicella-zoster virus.

    desipramine - an antidepressant often prescribed to help reduce the pain from
    postherpetic neuralgia. Doctors often prescribe it because it has fewer side effects
    than some other antidepressants.

    famcyclovir - one of three available antiviral drugs that can reduce the severity
    and duration of a shingles attack if given soon after onset.

    gabapentin -- an antiseizure medicine that is also used as a pain reliever.

    herpes zoster - the medical term for shingles; an infection caused by the
    varicella-zoster virus, one of the herpesviruses family of viruses.

    herpes simplex - the medical term for a related but different virus that causes repeated
    mild blisters of the skin or mucous membrane. Herpes simplex rashes can return many
    times, whereas shingles usually appears no more than once or twice in a person's lifetime.

    herpesviruses - a large family of viruses that cause a number of related conditions
    including, but not limited to, oral and genital herpes simplex, varicella (chickenpox),
    and herpes-zoster (shingles).

    immunosuppressed - having a weakened immune system. Common causes are
    certain illnesses (HIV, some cancers) or use of certain drugs such as prednisone.

    latent - hidden, dormant, inactive. The virus that causes chickenpox remains hidden in
    the nervous system after the initial attack of chickenpox is over. When it becomes
    reactivated, usually many years later, the virus can cause shingles.

    lidocaine - a pain-killing drug sometimes used for treating postherpetic neuralgia. It is
    available in an adhesive fabric patch that can be placed on the skin directly over the site
    of the pain.

    neuron- the functional cell of the brain and nervous system.

    nortriptyline- an antidepressant often prescribed to help reduce the pain from
    postherpetic neuralgia. Doctors often prescribe it because it has fewer side effects
    than some other antidepressants.

    postherpetic itch - severe, painful, and difficult to treat itching that sometimes
    accompanies postherpetic neuralgia. Topical local anesthetics provide relief to
    some patients.

    postherpetic neuralgia - a condition characterized by pain that persists more than
    3 months after healing of a shingles rash; caused by damage to the nervous system.

    prednisone - an anti-inflammatory corticosteroid drug routinely given to shingles
    patients when an eye or other facial nerve is involved.

    valacyclovir - one of three available antiviral drugs that can reduce the severity and
    duration of a shingles attack if given soon after onset.

    varicella-zoster virus - a virus that causes two distinct diseases, chickenpox and
    shingles. It is a member of the herpesvirus family. "Varicella" is Latin for little pox; "zoster"
    is the Greek word for girdle. Medically, zoster is sometimes used as a synonym for shingles.

    zoster sine herpete - a case of shingles in which there are no blisters or other signs
    of the illness on the skin.


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