In otherwise healthy people, shingles is uncommon before age 50. However, about half of people who live to 85 will experience a bout. The risk increases over time because the bodys immune system weakens with age. The risk also increases if the immune system is compromised for other reasons for example, cancer, HIV infection, or immunosuppressive drugs. As with chickenpox, you will most likely get shingles only once. But once is more than enough.
Small, fluid-filled blisters resembling chickenpox break out along dermatomal lines (see illustration) on either the left or right side of the body. Most rashes occur either on the upper torso or around or below the waist (the word shingles comes from the Latin word cingulum, which means belt or girdle). In about 10 to 25 percent of cases, the rash affects the face near the eyes, as what happened to David Letterman. If the virus gets into the eye, it can scar or damage the cornea and lead to blindness. Attacks also occur on the arms and legs. After seven to 10 days, the blisters crust over, and within a few weeks, the rash and usually the pain are gone. The pain that accompanies shingles can be intense, especially when the rash is particularly bad or preceded by pain or tingling.
Treatment should begin within 72 hours after the rash appears. After that, the virus stops replicating and antiviral medications wont help. Two antiviral agents available in the Philippines acyclovir (Zovirax) and valaciclovir (Valtrex) appear equally safe and effective. Acyclovir is taken five times a day for seven days and valaciclovir is taken three times a day for seven days.
Over-the-counter pain relievers, such as aspirin or acetaminophen, are not strong enough to relieve pain during the outbreak. Strong opioid medications may help. Other medications that may reduce the pain are tricyclic antidepressants and certain anticonvulsants. The pain-relieving effects of tricyclic antidepressants may take several weeks to kick in. When used for pain relief, these drugs are prescribed in lower doses than when they are used to treat depression.
The prevalence of postherpetic neuralgia is difficult to determine because definitions vary. Some researchers define it as any lingering pain, while others specify pain more than one month, three months, or six months after the appearance of the rash. In a few cases, it lasts more than a year. Like the risk of shingles, postherpetic neuralgia risk increases with age. About 40 percent of people over age 50 who get shingles have some postherpetic neuralgia, as do 50 percent of those over 60, and 75 percent of those over 75. Other risk factors include pain before the rash and severe pain and severe rash during acute shingles. People with all these risk factors have at least a 50 percent chance of having postherpetic neuralgia for six months or more. Fortunately, postherpetic neuralgia is not life-threatening and almost always eventually subsides.
In the past few years, some new treatments have emerged. The first drug approved specifically for postherpetic neuralgia by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) is not a pill, but a patch. Introduced in 1999, the Lidoderm patch contains lidocaine, the same medication a dentist may inject into your gum before filling a cavity or doing a root canal. The patch is applied directly over the sorest area of the skin. Because lidocaine is not taken internally and is absorbed from the patch only in tiny amounts, the treatment is considered quite safe.
In 2002, the FDA approved the use of the anticonvulsant agent, gabapentin (Neurontin) for managing postherpetic neuralgia. Although other anticonvulsants have been used for years to relieve pain related to nerve damage, clinical trials have yielded solid proof that gabapentin well-tolerated and safe in the elderly is effective not only for pain relief, but also in improving the quality of life of people with postherpetic neuralgia. Recently, another medication pregabalin (Lyrica) has been introduced for the treatment of neuropathic pains in adults. Initial clinical experience had been encouraging.
Among the vaccine group, there were 315 confirmed cases of herpes zoster and 27 cases of postherpetic neuralgia. Among the control group, there were 642 cases of herpes zoster and 80 cases of postherpetic neuralgia. The vaccine reduced the incidence of herpes zoster by 51 percent and of postherpetic neuralgia by 67 percent. The study concluded that the vaccine was effective in significantly preventing herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia in people aged 60 years or older.
Its a promising development in our fight to control one of humankinds oldest, most mysterious, and most painful conditions.