shingles virus - herpes zoster - valtrex - acyclovir - shingles treatment - shingles medication - shingles cure - shingles picture
What is shingles?
Shingles is an infection caused by a virus from the herpes family of
viruses. Shingles is caused by the herpes zoster/ varicella-zoster
virus, which is the same virus that causes chickenpox. Shingles only
occurs in people who have had chickenpox; shingles represents a
reactivation of the dormant varicella-zoster virus. Shingles generally
affects the elderly, although it occasionally occurs in younger and/or
immunodeficient individuals. The first sign is usually a tingling
feeling, itchiness, or stabbing pain on the skin. After a few days, a
rash appears as a band or patch of raised dots on the side of the trunk
or face. The rash develops into small, fluid-filled blisters which
begin to dry out and crust over within several days. When the rash is
at its peak, symptoms can range from mild itching to extreme and
intense pain.
Is shingles really: Chicken Pox v2.0?
When the itchy red spots of childhood chickenpox disappear and life
returns to normal, the battle with the virus that causes chickenpox
seems to be won. But for all too many of us this triumph of the body's
immune system over the virus that causes chickenpox is only temporary.
The virus has not been destroyed, but lays low, ready to strike again
later in life. This second eruption of the chickenpox virus is the
disease called shingles.
"I was having exams at college and I got a rash in a band around my
waist. I first thought it was chickenpox, but I'd had that years before
and instead of itching, this time the spots were very painful," recalls
a young woman who had shingles in her twenties.
The young woman's memory was correct. She had had chickenpox as a
child. You cannot develop shingles unless you have had an earlier bout
of chickenpox, and everyone who has had chickenpox is at risk for
shingles. The woman had the typical symptoms of this common
neurological disorder: more pain compared to chickenpox but less
itching. Her age was unusual, however. While young people do develop
shingles, the disease most often strikes in later years.
Scientists call the chickenpox/ shingles-causing agent the
varicella-zoster virus (VZV). Varicella is a Latin word meaning "little
pox" to distinguish the virus from smallpox, the highly contagious and
often fatal scourge that disfigured or killed millions of people,
especially during the Middle Ages. Zoster is the Greek word for
"girdle"; shingles often produces a girdle of blisters or lesions
around the waist. This striking pattern also gives the disease its
common name: the word shingles comes from cingulum, the Latin word for
belt or girdle.
Why does chicken pox come back as shingles?
Scientists believe that in the original battle with the chickenpox
virus some of the virus particles leave the skin blisters and move into
the nervous system. There the viruses settle down in an inactive
(latent) form inside specific nerve cells (neurons) that relay
information to the brain about what your body is sensing — whether your
skin feels hot or cold, whether you've been touched or feel pain. These
lie in clusters (ganglia) adjacent to the spinal cord and brain and are
one type of sensory neurons.
When the chickenpox virus reactivates, the virus moves down the long
nerve fibers 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.
The virus responsible for shingles and chickenpox belongs to a group of
viruses called herpes viruses. 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 the shingles-causing virus,
many other herpesviruses can take refuge in the nervous system after an
individual has suffered an initial infection. These viruses may remain
latent for years, then travel down nerve cell fibers to cause a renewed
infection.
The varicella-zoster virus looks as though it were designed by a
mathematician. It is a microscopic sphere encasing a 20-sided geometric
figure called an icosahedron. Inside the icosahedron is the genetic
material of the virus, deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). When activated, the
virus reproduces inside the nucleus of an infected cell. It acquires
its spherical wrapping as it buds through the nuclear membrane.
Why is chickenpox contagious, but not shingles?
the chickenpox and shingles diseases are caused by the same virus —
varicella-zoster. When a person, usually a child, is first exposed to
the varicella-zoster virus, he or she develops chickenpox, a highly
contagious disease. Most of us catch it during childhood because the
virus can be spread through air as well as through contact with the
rash. The infection begins in the upper respiratory tract where the
virus reproduces over a period of 15 days or more (the incubation
period). The virus then spreads to the bloodstream and migrates to the
skin, giving rise to the familiar rash.
In contrast, you can't catch shingles. You must already have had a case
of chickenpox and harbor the virus in your nervous system to develop
shingles. When reactivated — most often because the immune system is
weakened, allowing the virus to break out of its dormant state — 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 however, a person who has
never had chickenpox can contract chickenpox by exposure to the
shingles rash.
Who are at risk for shingles?
About 10 percent of normal adults can be expected to get shingles
during their lifetimes, usually after age 50. The incidence increases
with age so that shingles is 10 times more likely to occur in adults
over 60 than in children under 10. Most people who get shingles develop
immunity to the virus and will not get the disease again, however,
shingles may recur in some individuals. These cases usually involve
people with declining or compromised immune systems, such as those
infected with HIV or receiving chemotherapy.
A person who is suffering from a disease that damages the immune
system, or who is taking anticancer drugs that suppress the immune
system, is a prime candidate for an attack of shingles. Even among
healthy individuals, temporary depression of the immune system because
of stress, a cold, and even sunburn may be associated with an attack of
shingles.
Youngsters whose mothers had chickenpox late in pregnancy — 5 to 21
days before giving birth — are also vulnerable to shingles. Sometimes
these children are born with chickenpox or develop a typical case
within a few days (see section entitled "Do Women Have Special Risks
from Shingles" for more information).
What are the symptoms of shingles?
The first sign of shingles is often burning or tingling pain, or
sometimes numbness, in or under the skin. The individual may also feel
ill with fever, chills, headache, or stomach upset. After several days,
a rash of small fluid-filled blisters, reminiscent of chickenpox,
appears on reddened skin. The pain associated with shingles can be
intense and is often described as "unrelenting." People with lesions on
the torso may feel spasms of pain at the gentlest touch or breeze. The
blisters are usually limited to a band, called dermatomes, spanning one
side of the trunk, around the waistline, or clustered on one side of
the face.
The distribution of the shingles spots is a telltale clue to where the
chickenpox virus has been hiding since the initial infection.
Scientists now know that the shingles lesions correspond to the
dermatome supplied by a specific sensory nerve that exits from the
brain or spinal cord.
For the majority of healthy individuals, this second bout with the
chickenpox virus is almost always a second triumph of the body's immune
system. The shingles attack may last longer than chickenpox, and the
patient may need medication for pain, but in most cases the body has
the inner resources to fight back. The lesions heal, the pain subsides
within 3 to 5 weeks, and for most patients the blisters leave no scars.
What does shingles look like?
Here is a
shingles picture .
Is shingles contagious?
As early as 1909 a German scientist suspected that the viruses causing
chickenpox and shingles were one and the same. In the 1920's and 1930's
the case was strengthened. In an experiment, children were inoculated
with fluid from the lesions of patients with shingles. Within 2 weeks
about half the children came down with chickenpox. Finally in 1958
detailed analyses of the viruses taken from patients with either
chickenpox or shingles confirmed that the viruses were identical.
This study also proved that a person with shingles can pass the virus
to individuals who have never had chickenpox, but these individuals
will develop chickenpox not shingles. A person with chickenpox cannot
communicate shingles to someone else. In order for people to develop
shingles they must already harbor the virus in their nervous system,
and for those who do harbor the virus, having contact with someone with
chickenpox will not trigger shingles. Additionally, a person with
shingles cannot communicate shingles to another individual.
What are the complications of shingles?
Shingles can be serious. People with "optical" shingles (where the
virus has invaded an ophthalmic nerve) may suffer painful eye
inflammations that leave them temporarily blind or impair their vision.
Individuals with this type of shingles should see an ophthalmologist
immediately. If shingles appears on the face and affects the auditory
nerves, it can also lead to complications in hearing. Infections of
facial nerves can lead to temporary paralysis.
What is postherpetic neuralgia?
Sometimes, particularly in older people, symptoms of shingles persist
long after the rash is healed. In these cases, facial paralysis,
headache, and persistent pain can be the aftermath. Possibly because
the nerve cells conveying pain sensations are hardest hit, or are
exquisitely sensitized by the virus attack, pain is the principal
persistent complication of shingles. This pain, called postherpetic
neuralgia, is among the most devastating known to mankind — the
kind of pain that leads to insomnia, weight loss, depression, and that
total preoccupation with unrelenting torment that characterizes the
chronic pain sufferer.
Although it can be extraordinarily painful, postherpetic neuralgia is
not life-threatening. Doctors treating the pain currently employ a
variety of medications. Powerful narcotic pain relievers can offer
relief but, because they can have serious side effects, doctors often
prescribe newer non-addictive but potent painkillers. Ointments
containing capsaicin, the heat-producing ingredient found in hot chili
peppers, are effective in relieving pain from postherpetic neuralgia,
as well as pain from other disorders such as arthritis. Such ointments
are currently available by prescription. Although these creams contain
less than 1 percent capsaicin, new research suggests that patients may
be able to tolerate creams containing 5 to 10 percent of this active
ingredient if used in combination with other pain killers. More
research is needed before these higher dose ointments will be available
to patients with postherpetic neuralgia (see section entitled "What
Research is Being Done?").
In 1999, the Food and Drug Administration approved a new method of
treating the pain of postherpetic neuralgia. The product is an adhesive
patch containing lidocaine, a commonly used local anesthetic. The patch
allows lidocaine to be released into the top layers of the skin,
reducing pain from the damaged nerves. Because it delivers the drug via
the skin, it does not produce any significant levels of the drug in the
blood and, therefore, does not cause serious systemic side effects if
used appropriately.
Studies have also shown that some anticonvulsant drugs used to treat
epilepsy, such as carbamazepine, are sometimes effective in relieving
the pain of postherpetic neuralgia. Antidepressants can help also. In
addition to their effects on mood, the antidepressants appear to
relieve pain. Some doctors report that patients occasionally benefit
from alternative treatments for pain, such as acupuncture and
electrical stimulation of nerve endings.
It is important to realize that individuals with postherpetic neuralgia
no longer have shingles: their infection is over. Instead, they are
suffering from damage to the nervous system. Scientists believe that
the virus attack has led to scarring or other lesions affecting the
cells in sensory ganglia and associated nerves. Even in such severe
cases, however, the paralysis, headaches, and pain generally subside,
although it may take time.
Is shingles life-threatening?
Shingles is a serious threat to life in immunosuppressed individuals —
for example, those with HIV infection or patients with cancer who are
receiving treatments that can weaken their immune systems. These
treatments destroy cancerous tissue but unfortunately they also have
the potential to damage cells of the immune system that normally fight
invading organisms. Patients who receive organ transplants (for kidney
disease, for example) are also vulnerable to shingles. To prevent the
body from rejecting the foreign tissue of the transplant, these
patients are given drugs that suppress the immune system. Should any of
these patients contract shingles, there is a possibility that the
zoster virus will spread throughout the body, reaching vital organs
like the lungs. If unchecked, such disseminated zoster can lead to
death from viral pneumonia or secondary bacterial infection.
Are women at special risk from shingles?
Many mothers-to-be are concerned about any infection contracted during
pregnancy, and rightly so. It is well known that certain viruses can be
transmitted across the mother's bloodstream to the fetus, or can be
acquired by the baby during the birth process.
Maternal chickenpox poses some risk to the unborn child, depending upon
the stage of pregnancy during which the mother contracts the disease.
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.
If the mother gets chickenpox from 21 to 5 days before giving birth,
the newborn may have chickenpox at birth or develop it within a few
days, as noted earlier. 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 third 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 virus must also be fought by immune
cells.
What if the mother contracts chickenpox at precisely 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
precious little ability to fight off the attack because the immune
system is immature. For these babies chickenpox can be fatal. They must
be given "zoster immune globulin," a preparation made from the
antibody-rich blood of adults who have recently recovered from
chickenpox or shingles.
What is the prognosis?
Although shingles can be very painful and itchy, it is not generally
dangerous to healthy individuals and it usually resolves without
complications. The rash and pain usually go away within 3 to 5 weeks.
Sometimes serious effects including partial facial paralysis (usually
temporary), ear damage, or encephalitis (inflammation of the brain) may
occur. Persons with shingles on the upper half of the face should seek
medical attention immediately as the virus may cause serious damage to
the eyes. Most people who have shingles have only one bout with the
disease in their lifetime. However, individuals with impaired immune
systems, i.e., people with AIDS or cancer, may suffer repeated episodes.
Is there any treatment for shingles?
The severity and duration of an attack of shingles can be significantly
reduced by immediate treatment with antiviral drugs including: Valtrex,
Acyclovir, valacyclovir, and famcyclovir. Antiviral drugs may also help
stave off the painful after-effects of shingles known as postherpetic
neuralgia (see section entitled "What are the Complications of
Shingles?). Doctors now recommend starting antiviral drugs within 72
hours of the first sign of the shingles rash. Early treatment is
believed to reduce the risk of postherpetic neuralgia and may speed up
the healing process. Other treatments for post-herpetic neuralgia
include steroids, antidepressants, anticonvulsants, and topical agents.
Scientists continue to work toward developing newer antiviral agents
and more effective pain killers.
Where can people get medication for shingles?
There are several place on the internet to order anti-viral medications
for shingles:
What research is being done on shingles?
Because of the nervous system involvement, the chickenpox/ shingles
virus is of great interest to the National Institute of Neurological
Disorders and Stroke (NINDS), a division of the National Institutes of
Health (NIH) and the principal Federal agency supporting research on
the nervous system. The disease is of equal interest to another branch
of the NIH — the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
(NIAID). In addition, the National Cancer Institute (NCI) and the
National Institute on Aging (NIA) support research on shingles: NCI's
interest in the disorder relates to the high incidence of shingles in
patients receiving immunosuppressant treatments for cancer, and NIA
conducts studies because of the prevalence and severity of the disease
among elderly adults.
Shingles poses two immediate challenges to medical research. The first
is to develop drugs to fight the disease and to prevent complications.
The second challenge is to understand the disease well enough to
prevent it, especially in people known to be at high risk. To protect
susceptible patients from a shingles attack scientists need to know
much more about the varicella-zoster virus, especially how it remains
latent in the body for so long and what induces it to become active
again. NIA-supported scientists are studying the biology of the
varicella-zoster virus in an effort to gain a better understanding of
the molecular basis of viral latency and reactivation.
Although the virus is presumed to hide in the nervous system between
bouts of chickenpox and shingles, it has never been recovered from
nerve cells at autopsies unless the patient had shingles at the time of
death. In contrast, herpes simplex, which causes recurrent infections
of cold sores and fever blisters, has been identified in spinal nerve
cells during its latent periods.
If the whole varicella-zoster virus does not remain intact in nerve
cells, perhaps its core genetic material — the DNA — survives.
Scientists suspect that the viral DNA may be inserted into one of the
chromosomes of the nerve cell — the larger units that house the cell's
own genetic material.
What keeps the varicella-zoster virus quiet during its long latency?
Probably the immune system. A healthy immune system protects against
all kinds of diseases, but people with depressed immunity are
vulnerable to many illnesses, and have a high incidence of shingles.
Antibodies, one of the immune system's major defense mechanisms against
infection, are not very helpful against shingles. Studies have shown
that patients with shingles produce varicella-zoster antibodies but
they don't halt the infection. Similarly, injections of antibody-rich
blood serum do not prevent the dissemination of shingles in cancer
patients or others whose immune systems are depressed. (This is in
contrast to the protection conferred by the immunoglobulin given to
newborns with chickenpox.)
The components of the immune system that do appear to combat shingles
are two types of white blood cells: the T lymphocytes and scavenger
cells called macrophages. Scientists are trying to find ways of
boosting 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).
Current research is aimed at finding new methods for treating shingles
and its complications. In one NINDS-supported study, investigators are
studying the effectiveness of a long-acting preparation of morphine (a
type of analgesic used to manage pain) as a possible treatment for
postherpetic neuralgia. Research from this study could lead to improved
treatment for this condition, which complicates many cases of shingles.
Capsaicin ointment (containing less than 1 percent of the active
ingredient) is a currently available treatment for the pain of
shingles, especially postherpetic neuralgia. In 1998 a group of
scientists tested a higher dose capsaicin cream (5 to 10 percent) in a
small group of patients suffering from pain caused by a number of
different conditions, including diabetes, arthritis, and HIV infection.
Seven of ten patients reported a 50 percent reduction in pain after
using these higher dose creams. Further studies, using larger groups of
patients, will be conducted to establish the safety and effectiveness
of this promising treatment, which could bring relief to patients
suffering from postherpetic neuralgia.
The development of preventive measures and treatments for shingles has
long been hindered by scientists' difficulty in working with the
varicella-zoster virus in the laboratory. The virus grows very poorly
in laboratory cells and does not infect animals other than man. The
Department of Veteran Affairs (VA) launched a nationwide trial — the
Shingles Prevention Study — to study an experimental shingles vaccine.
In the study, which is a cooperative Federal government effort
involving the VA and NIAID, investigators are testing a more potent
version of the vaccine currently used to immunize children against
chickenpox. The purpose of the trial is to find out if the vaccine is
safe and how well it works to prevent shingles. Successful results
would represent a big step toward eradicating shingles.
Although shingles will continue to afflict people in the years to come,
there is now hope that scientists are close to creating a vaccine
capable of preventing this painful condition. In the course of this
work on vaccines, scientists expect to uncover important information to
use against other diseases, to learn more about the body's immune
system, and ultimately to outwit the clever viruses that evade that
system.
Where can I get more information about herpes/ genital
herpes?
ihaveherpes.com
http://ihaveherpes.com
Where can I get more general information about shingles?
NIH/ NINDS
Tel: 800-352-9424
http://www.ninds.nih.gov
American Chronic Pain Association (ACPA)
Email: ACPA@pacbell.net
http://www.theacpa.org
Tel: 916-632-0922
Fax: 916-632-3208
National Chronic Pain Outreach Association (NCPOA)
http://chronicpain.org
Email: ncpoa@cfw.com
Tel: 540-862-9437
Fax: 540-862-9485
VZV Research Foundation [For Research on Varicella Zoster]
http://www.vzvfoundation.org
vzv@vzvfoundation.org
Tel: 212-472- 3181
Tel Tollfree: 800-472-VIRUS (8478)
Fax: 212-861-7033
National Foundation for the Treatment of Pain
http://www.paincare.org
mgordon@mbay.net
Tel: 831-655-8812
Fax: 831-655-2823
Online pharmacies
OnlinePharmacy.Org
http://onlinepharmacy.org
Shingles Medication
Famciclovir - Famciclovir (one brand name
is Famvir) is an antiviral used to treat herpes zoster (shingles) and
genital herpes. It may also be used to treat other conditions as
determined by your doctor.
Valacyclovir -
Valacyclovir (one brand name
is Valtrex) is an antiviral used in patients with normal immune systems
to treat herpes zoster infections (shingles) or to treat or suppress
genital herpes. This medicine may be used in combination with safe sex
practices in patients with genital herpes to help reduce the risk of
spreading the condition to others. This medicine may also be used for
cold sores (herpes simplex) or other conditions as determined by your
doctor.
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