Causes Shingles is due to the same virus that causes chickenpox. This invades the ganglia of the nerves, particularly the spinal nerves of the chest and the ?fth cranial nerve which supplies the face. Despite being due to the same virus as chickenpox, it is rare for herpes zoster to occur as a result of contact with a case of chickenpox. On the other hand, it is not unusual for a patient with herpes zoster to infect a child with chickenpox. It is a disease of adults rather than children, and the older the person, the more likely he or she is to develop the disease. Thus in adults under 50, the incidence is around 2·5 per 1,000 people a year; between 50 and 60 it is around 5 per 1,000; whilst in octogenarians it is 10 per 1,000. Occasionally it may be associated with some serious underlying disease such as LEUKAEMIA, LYMPHADENOMA, or multiple myeloma (see MYELOMATOSIS).
Symptoms The ?rst symptoms are much like those of any feverish attack. The person feels unwell for some days, has a slight rise of temperature, and feels vague pain in the side or in various other parts. Often the area of skin to be affected feels hypersensitive (hyperaesthesia) as though something were rubbing on it. The pain ?nally settles at a point in the side, and, two or three days after the ?rst symptoms, the rash appears. Minute yellow blebs – or vesicles, as they are known – are seen on the skin of the back, of the side, or of the front of the chest, or simultaneously on all three, the points corresponding to the space between one pair of ribs right around. These blebs increase in number for some days, and spread until there is often a complete half-girdle around one side of the chest. The pain in this stage is severe, but it appears to vary a good deal with age, being slight in children and very severe in old people, in whom indeed herpes sometimes forms a serious illness. After one or two weeks, most of the vesicles have dried up and formed scabs. The pain may not pass o? when the eruption disappears, but may remain for weeks or even months – a condition known as post-herpetic NEURALGIA. Old people are prone to develop this condition.
Treatment ACICLOVIR or famciclovir can be given orally, and are e?ective if started in large doses early in the attack. Later, topical antibiotics may be required. Analgesics may be necessary if neuralgia is severe.... herpes zoster