Shingles on the forearm
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Shingles

Herpes zoster, colloquially known as shingles, is the reactivation of varicella zoster virus, leading to a crop of painful blisters over the area of a dermatome. It occurs very rarely in children and adults, but its incidence is high in the elderly (over 60), as well as in any age group of immunocompromised patients. It affects some 500,000 people per year in the United States. Treatment is generally with antiviral drugs such as acyclovir. Many patients develop a painful condition called postherpetic neuralgia which is often difficult to manage. more...

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In some patients, herpes zoster can reactivate subclinically with pain in a dermatomal distribution without rash. This condition is known as zoster sine herpete and may be more complicated, affecting multiple levels of the nervous system and causing multiple cranial neuropathies, polyneuritis, myelitis, or aseptic meningitis.

The word herpes came from Greek, which is cognate with serpent and, as can be expected, herpetology. Interestingly, the skin disease is also commonly known as "snake" in Chinese.

Signs and symptoms

Often, pain is the first symptom. This pain can be characterized as stinging, tingling, numbing, or throbbing, and can be pronounced with quick stabs of intensity. Then 2-3 crops of red lesions develop, which gradually turn into small blisters filled with serous fluid. A general feeling of unwellness often occurs.

As long as the blisters have not dried out, HZ patients may transmit the virus to others. This could lead to chickenpox in people (mainly young children) who are not yet immune to this virus.

Shingles blisters are unusual in that they only appear on one side of the body. That is because the chickenpox virus can remain dormant for decades, and does so inside the spinal column or a nerve fiber. If it reactivates as shingles, it affects only a single nerve fiber, or ganglion, which can radiate to only one side of the body. The blisters therefore only affect one area of the body and do not cross the midline. They are most common on the torso, but can also appear on the face (where they are potentially hazardous to vision) or other parts of the body.

Diagnosis

The diagnosis is visual — very few other diseases mimic herpes zoster. In case of doubt, fluid from a blister may be analysed in a medical laboratory.

Pathophysiology

The causative agent for herpes zoster is varicella zoster virus (VZV). Most people are infected with this virus as a child, as it causes chickenpox. The body eliminates the virus from the system, but it remains dormant in the ganglia adjacent to the spinal cord or the ganglion semilunare (ganglion Gasseri) in the cranial base.

Generally, the immune system suppresses reactivation of the virus. In the elderly, whose immune response generally tends to deteriorate, as well as in those patients whose immune system is being suppressed, this process fails. (Some researchers speculate that sunburn and other, unrelated stresses that can affect the immune system may also lead to viral reactivation.) The virus starts replicating in the nerve cells, and newly formed viruses are carried down the axons to the area of skin served by that ganglion (a dermatome). Here, the virus causes local inflammation in the skin, with the formation of blisters.

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More contact with children helps prevent shingles - Tips from Other Journals - Brief Article
From American Family Physician, 1/1/03 by Anne D. Walling

Following primary infection, the varicella-zoster virus becomes latent in the dorsal root ganglia. Reactivation of the virus, probably related to a decline in specific cell-mediated immunity, results in clinical herpes zoster (shingles). This common condition causes significant morbidity, especially chronic neuralgia, in older patients. Thomas and colleagues tested the hypothesis that frequent exposure to the virus through contact with children could repeatedly boost immunity and decrease the incidence of shingles.

They studied patients who had recently been diagnosed with shingles by physicians in 22 general practices in London. Each patient was matched by age and sex with two control subjects from the same practice. All study participants were interviewed to establish their level of contact with children younger than 10 years (the most common group with varicella infections in the United Kingdom). Participants were grouped into three categories--distal, intermediate, and proximal--based on the duration and frequency of contact with children.

The 244 patients and 485 control subjects were well matched, with only an average of five days difference in age. Positive history of contact with cases of varicella during the previous 10 years was found to be strongly protective against shingles, even after adjusting for all contacts with children. Protection against shingles increased with exposure to many children outside the home, and there was some evidence of a dose-response effect.

The authors conclude that continuous exposure to varicella virus through community contacts protects latently infected adults from developing clinical shingles. This correlates with reports that children with leukemia show immunologic boosting and reduced rates of clinical shingles after exposure to varicella cases. The effect of living with children appeared to protect against shingles by increasing total exposure to large numbers of children outside of the household. Because of immunization, the authors speculate that lower rates of childhood varicella could lead to increased rates of adult shingles as the virus becomes less prevalent in the community. In the long term, however, vaccinated persons are less likely to develop latency, so rates of shingles would eventually fall.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Several friends from the baby-boomer generation have endured shingles over the past few years, but none has developed post-herpetic neuralgia, possibly because of aggressive antiviral therapy. One patient was initially considered to have atypical angina, and only the appearance of the rash after 36 hours of unusual chest pain spared him from intensive cardiac evaluation. This article raises the prospect of a mini-epidemic of shingles in the generation who were all exposed to chickenpox as children and whose immune systems are now aging gracefully. Perhaps it is time to seriously consider varicella vaccination at midlife. If all of our other immune protections are fading, maybe grandparents should take infants for their shots and physicians should offer "twofers." An alternative would be the approach to rubella encountered during my Scottish childhood. A large party was held at the home of the first case, and all the little girls in the neighborhood were invited to ensure a good spread of the virus. Fortunately, we probably have too few cases of varicella to go around, but the argument for increased social mixing to continually boost immune systems is sound and one more reason not to become a nation of couch potatoes.--A.D.W.

COPYRIGHT 2003 American Academy of Family Physicians
COPYRIGHT 2003 Gale Group

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