Shingles is an acute, unilateral, painful blistering rash caused by reactivation of varicella zoster virus (VZV).
It peaks at 70+ years and affects men and women equally.
Phases of shingles
| Phase | Description |
|---|---|
| Prodrome | Crusting within 10 – 12 days of ash onset. May take up to one month to completely disappear |
| Infectious phase | Acute neuralgia, non-specific symptoms, and lymphadenopathy |
| Resolution phase | Crusting within 10 – 12 days of ash onset. May take up to one month to ompletely disappear |
- Causes
- Emotional stress
- Immunosuppressin
- Chemotherapy
- High-dose steroid therapy
- Recent illnessor surgery
- Sunburn
- Trauma
- Signs and symptoms
- Diferentials
- Treatment
- Analgesia
- Topical capsaicin
- Cold compress
- PO antiviral within 2 hours of the onset of the rash
- Corticosteroids
- Prevention
- Shingles vaccine for all patients 70 – 79 years
- Live-attenuated vaccine
- Given subcutaneously
- Contraindicated in immunosuppressed patients
- 1 in 10,000 people develop chickenpox
- Shingles vaccine for all patients 70 – 79 years
- Complications
- Post-herpetic neuralgia
- Herpes zoster ophthalmicus
- Ramsay-hunt syndrome
- Encephalitis
