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Morever, is there any vaccine to prevent the deadlier form of chicken pox- herpes zoaster.

2006-07-06 09:34:12 · 12 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Diseases & Conditions Infectious Diseases

12 answers

There are so many misconceptions about varicella and shingles that I feel compelled to set this right again. Christin K was right on nearly every point - except about shinges being a more severe infection by varicella in adulthood.

Lets start with this: the causative virus of chicken pox and shingles is the same virus: varicella-zoster virus. "Chicken pox" is the name for a syndrome- a collection of symptms and findings that is usually seen in primary (first exposure) infections. BUT- chicken pox may occur two times or more in rare cases. It is thought (but not proved) that these are serial re-infections with different strains and NOT the reactivation of disease that is known as "shingles" or "herpos zoster". Importantly, "shingles" or "zoster " is the reactivtion of a latent varicella infection that happened in the past- it is not the name for chicken pox in an adult.

Which is more deadly, chicken pox or shingles? Chicken pox, by far. Adults who contract chicken pox have a much higher risk of varicella pneumonia which is a very aggressive disease. Pneumonia, encephalitis, hepatitis, and secondary skin infection may all complicate varicella. By comparison with chicken pox in the adult, zoster is a minor nuissance.

The varicella vaccine is about 80% efective in preventing primary infection by varicella. It is not certain whether those who receive the vaccine (a live form of varicella) are less or more likely to suffer from shingles later.

2006-07-12 04:27:15 · answer #1 · answered by hobo_chang_bao 4 · 1 0

YES, You can get chicken pox more than once. A second infection will usually be milder than the first, OR it may result in a more serious illness called "Shingles" (Herpes zoster.)

YES there is a chicken pox vaccine. it is usually given to children between 12 and 18 months old, but can also be given to older children or adults who have never had the disease.

NO the vaccine may not prevent all forms of chicken pox or shingles, but the viral outbreaks may be shorter and of less intensity.

Neither chicken pox or shingles are "deadly". They are uncomfortable, but not life-threatening. Complications can arise, such as varicella pneumonia, or meningitis, but these are extremely rare.

2006-07-06 10:01:23 · answer #2 · answered by Christin K 7 · 0 0

Yes, but in an adult, the varicella-zoster virus causes shingles, which is like chickenpox only much more severe. Not only do you get the blisters and fever, you are also subject to unrelenting pain, numbness of extremities, and neural problems. The disease is either a new infection or a re-infection from someone who had chickenpox -- the virus travels down nerve fibers and resides dormant in the basal nerve ganglia, until such time when the immune system is suppressed, such as with active HIV infection, people undergoing chemotherapy, or the elderly. There is a vaccine that was just approved this year for people 60 and over who have had chickenpox before, that seems to cut the risk of contracting shingles in half.

2006-07-06 09:43:37 · answer #3 · answered by theyuks 4 · 0 0

No,I don't think so because usually chicken pox occurs to people at a young age. So afterwards they can get a shot to prevent it from happening.People say that the older you are when you get the chicken pox the more it hurts.

2006-07-06 09:42:28 · answer #4 · answered by ? 2 · 0 0

Yes, the virus never leaves your body and can come back years later as another case of chicken pox or shingles. The vaccine is of no use for someone already exposed to the virus.

2006-07-06 09:38:14 · answer #5 · answered by alwaysbombed 5 · 0 0

I got identified with herpes simplex virus (type 2) about 4 years back, whilst I was still attending college and had a foolish one-night stand. I know lots of young women say this, but I swear I had never done that sort of thing before. I just made a huge mistake that one time and all of a sudden I felt like I was going to have to live with the consequences for the rest of my life. The worst part was feeling I could never date other men again. After all, who wants to go out with someone who has sores round her private parts? But since a friend shared this video https://tr.im/0RI2e everything improved.

Not only was I able to eradicate all remnants of the herpes virus from my body in less than 3 weeks, but I was also able to begin dating again. I even met the guy of my dreams and I'm so lucky to write that just a week ago, in front of everybody in a crowded restaurant, he got down on one knee and proposed to me!!! This system gave me back the chance to be happy and experience real love again. Now I want to help others too by sharing this story.

2015-09-26 14:27:21 · answer #6 · answered by Shelby 1 · 0 0

No, you can't get chicken pox again, but you can get something called Shingles which is somehow related. Sorry, don't know about the vaccine.

2006-07-06 09:38:21 · answer #7 · answered by Stella Blue 3 · 0 0

Your body has a resistance to the pressure of fowl pox that you suffered by skill of once you've been a baby. in case you cousin has some new pressure that your body hasn't outfitted resistance yet then certain, you'' capture it back.

2016-10-14 04:46:31 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

If you had chicken pox as a kid, you can still get the adult version which is called shingles. they can keep coming back. No vaccine as far as i know.

2006-07-06 09:39:21 · answer #9 · answered by soupdragonz 2 · 0 0

Ive always heard it returns as shingles when older

2006-07-06 09:37:54 · answer #10 · answered by Tim D 2 · 0 0

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