If you suddenly develop severe pain in a limited area on one side of
your body, you may have shingles and need treatment immediately to
prevent that pain from lasting for the rest of your life. Shingles is
Chicken Pox the second time around. It's called postherpetic neuralgia
and when you have severe pain that is not caused by an injury and your
doctor cannot find a cause, you should get a blood test for herpes
zoster and start taking Famvir or Valtrex immediately to prevent the
pain from becoming permanent.
The first time you get chicken pox,
blisters form over most of your body. After a week, your immunity
drives the chicken pox virus from your bloodstream, but it remains in
your nerve roots for the rest of your life. One of every in six people
who get chicken pox will have the virus escape from nerves many years
later to cause painful grouped blisters on the skin over the infected
nerve on one side of the body.
If you wait for characteristic
blisters to form, it may be too late to prevent the pain from lasting
the rest of your life. Fifty percent of people over 60 who develop
shingles, and are not treated, will suffer from post-herpetic neuralgia
and have severe pain in that nerve for the rest of their lives, while
fewer than seven percent treated with acyclovir will suffer permanent
pain. Cortisones offer little protection. If you develop postherpetic
neuralgia, your pain can be treated with a .025% capsaicin (pepper)
cream and tegretol or gabapentin anticonvulsant pills. A report in the
New England Journal of Medicine offers a more effective treatment for
post-herpetic neuralgia: 60 mg of methyl prednisone, injected directly
into the spinal fluid, once a week for four weeks, lessens and even
cures the pain.