Mortality/Morbidity:
Chickenpox affecting a healthy child is usually a self-limited disease. Secondary bacterial infection of skin lesions, manifesting as impetigo, cellulitis, or erysipelas, is the most common complication in this population. Staphylococci and streptococci are the most commonly implicated bacterial pathogens. Bacterial superinfection may predispose to scarring. Localized bacterial superinfection may rarely result in septicemia, culminating in a secondary bacterial pneumonia, otitis media, or necrotizing fasciitis
Congenital infection with the VZV virus is also a concern. Maternal chickenpox during pregnancy may produce latency of the VZV virus in the dorsal root ganglia of the fetus. These children may remain asymptomatic, or they may develop herpes zoster at a young age without previous history of primary chickenpox infection. Primary maternal chickenpox infection during the first 20 weeks of gestation may also rarely produce the congenital varicella syndrome, which is characterized by limb hypoplasia, muscular atrophy, skin scarring, cortical atrophy, microcephaly, cataract formation, and rudimentary digits
2006-09-16 18:22:20
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answer #1
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answered by karen g 2
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Nil. If there is an underlying immuno compromise like agamma globulinemia, uncontrolled diabetes,malignancy and AIDS it can be high.
2006-09-17 01:22:40
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answer #2
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answered by J.SWAMY I ఇ జ స్వామి 7
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