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General Reference

Jama 2009;302:73 (zoster); Nejm 2002;347:340; 2000;342:635 (zoster); Ann IM 1999;130:922

Pathophys and Cause

Cause:Varicella, a herpesvirus

Pathophys:Same organism causes 1st chickenpox, and later shingles (Nejm 1984;311:1362)

Epidemiology

Zoster: more common in the elderly and pts w HIV and cancer but not a si of occult malignancy; 10-20% of all persons will have in lifetime

Cpox: <10% repeat infections, probably quite rare (Jama 1997;278:1520); dramatic drop in US mortality after 10 yr of universal childhood vaccination (Nejm 2005;352:450)

Signs and Symptoms

Sx:

Cpox: 14-d incubation period; fever, centrifugal rash (on face and trunk 1st, then extremities)

Zoster: shingles rash; pain often, may precede and sometimes rash never appears

Si:

Cpox: fever <102°F (38.8°C); herpetic rash various ages, trunk 1st and worst. New lesions appear for 4 d

Zoster: classic herpetic lesions in dermatome distribution w hyperesthesia and pain; cranial and other neuropathies

Course

Cpox worse w incr age, so adolescents and adults suffer more than children

Complications

Cpox:

Zoster:

Lab and Xray

Lab:

Path:Skin bx or very nonspecific (HSV and VZV) Tzanck prep shows intranuclear inclusions and giant cells, enhanced by direct immunofluorescent staining assay

Serol: Antibody level to determine past immunity

Treatment

Rx:

Preventive:

of disease:

of zoster neuralgia (Jags 2007;55:1176; Nejm 1996;335:32) (see also Pain, Chronic, Rx):