Check it out at: mayoclinic.com
2006-06-30 08:42:20
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answer #1
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answered by ricardocoav 4
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Residual Pain From Shingles
2016-10-17 04:12:30
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answer #2
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answered by pippenger 4
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2016-08-31 06:14:59
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answer #3
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answered by Horace 3
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I am sure your doc must have given you an antiviral medicine (acyclovir) for shingles. It would take about 48 hours to decrease the pain with that medicine alone. If the pain is unbearable.... you could take any analgesics like paracetamol, ibuprofen etc. If there are blisters inside the eye... make sure you keep that area clean wash gently with water. Dont worry if the treatment has started its just matter of hours that the pain will go down. All the best.
2016-03-16 03:46:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Take alpha lipoic acid. This supplement has profound antioxidant activity - it is both water and fat soluble - but is most helpful with nerve issues, and the prevention and treatment of neuropathy. I would also take licorice. It contains an ingredient - glycirrizin - which inteferes with viral replication, and helps to soothe the endocrine system. I would also look into ingesting Noni (morindia citrifolia) because it is an effective pain killer, while also promoting healing.
Make sure, also, to avoid wheat and dairy, because these two substances do more to suppress the immune system's response to the virus than anything.
Finally, ingest as much whole food vitamin C as you can (no synthetic ascorbic acid!), which will boost your interferon and your general immune system's efficiency. Good luck!
2006-07-01 07:34:51
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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2016-04-28 09:45:29
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answer #6
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answered by tatum 3
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Aciclovir (an antiviral drug) inhibits replication of the viral DNA, and is used both as prophylaxis (e.g., in patients with AIDS) and as therapy for herpes zoster. Other antivirals are valaciclovir and famciclovir. Steroids are often given in severe cases. During the acute phase oral aciclovir should be given five times daily for 7 to 10 days. Immunocompromised patients may respond best to intravenous aciclovir. In patients who are at high risk for recurrences, an oral dose of aciclovir, taken twice daily, is usually effective.
The long term complication postherpetic neuralgia may cause persistent pain that lasts for years. Pain management is difficult as conventional analgesics may be ineffective. Alternative agents are often used, including tricyclic antidepressants (particularly amitriptyline), anticonvulsants (e.g. gabapentin, and/or topical capscaicin).
Zostavax is a vaccine developed by Merck & Co. which has proven successful in preventing half the cases of herpes zoster in a study of 38,000 people who received the vaccine.[2] The vaccine also reduced by two-thirds the number of cases of postherpetic neuralgia (Oxman et al., 2005). However, prior to the vaccine, it has long been known that adults received natural immune boosting from contact with children infected with varicella. This helped to suppress the reactivation of herpes zoster.(PMID 12057605) In Massachusetts, herpes zoster incidence increased 90%, from 2.77/1000 to 5.25/1000 in the period of increasing varicella vaccination 1999-2003 (Yih et al., 2005). The effectiveness of the varicella vaccine itself is dependent on this exogenous (outside) boosting mechanism. Thus, as natural cases of varicella decline, so has the effectiveness of the vaccine (Goldman, 2005).
Often the same treatment given to burn victims relieves the pain of shingles, including over-the-counter moist burn pads.
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Prognosis
The rash and pain usually subside within 3 to 5 weeks. The most common chronic complication of herpes zoster is postherpetic neuralgia. Pain that persists for longer than one to three months after resolution of the rash is generally accepted as the sign of postherpetic neuralgia. Sometimes serious effects including partial facial paralysis (usually temporary), ear damage, or encephalitis may occur. Shingles on the upper half of the face (the first branch of the trigeminal nerve) may result in eye damage and require urgent ophthalmological assessment. Ocular complications occur in approximately one half of patients with involvement of the ophthalmic division of the trigeminal nerve. These complications include mucopurulent conjunctivitis, episcleritis, keratitis and anterior uveitis. Cranial nerve palsies of the third, fourth and sixth cranial nerves may occur, affecting extraocular motility.
Since shingles is a reactivation of a virus contracted previously—often decades earlier—it cannot be induced by exposure to another person with shingles or chickenpox. Those with active blisters, however, can spread chickenpox to others who have never had that condition and who have not been vaccinated against it.
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Stages
Back pain and small rash spots appear
Rash spreads around the body
More pain develops
Bubbles filled with fluid pop up
After 4-5 days pain is gone and bubbles turn into dark purple and peel off
2006-06-30 10:45:23
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answer #7
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answered by Linda 7
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