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Senior Health


Senior Health Index
Bones and Joints
Cancer
Diseases and Conditions
Healthy Aging
Heart and Lungs
Memory and Mental Health


Shingles


About Shingles
Causes and Risk Factors
Symptoms and Diagnosis
Treatment
Frequently Asked Questions




Welcome to the Senior Health Section of RetirementCommunity.com. This easy-to-use website features health and wellness information for older adults from the National Institutes of Health.

 

Shingles

Symptoms and Diagnosis

An outbreak of shingles usually begins with a burning, itching, or tingling sensation on the back, chest, or around the rib cage or waist. It is also common for the face or eye area to be affected.

Some people report feeling feverish and weak during the early stages. Usually within 48 to 72 hours, a red, blotchy rash develops on the affected area. The rash erupts into small blisters that look like chickenpox. The blisters seem to arrive in waves over a period of three to five days.

The blisters tend to be clustered in one specific area, rather than being scattered all over the body like chickenpox. The torso or face are the parts most likely to be affected, but on occasion, shingles breaks out in the lower body. The burning sensation in the rash area is often accompanied by shooting pains.

After the blisters erupt, the open sores take a week or two to crust over. The sores are usually gone within another two weeks. The pain may diminish somewhat, but it often continues for months -- and can go on for years.

Shingles can be quite painful. Many shingles patients say that it was the intense pain that ultimately sent them to the doctor. They often report that the sensation of anything brushing across the inflamed nerve endings on the skin is almost unbearable.

A typical shingles case is easy to diagnose. The doctor might suspect shingles if

  • the rash is only on one side of the body

  • the rash erupts along one of the many nerve paths, called dermatomes, that stem from the spine

The doctor usually confirms a diagnosis of shingles if the person also

  • reports a sharp, burning pain

  • has had chickenpox

  • has blisters that look like chickenpox

  • is elderly.

Some people go to the doctor because of burning, painful, itchy sensations on one area of skin, but they don't get a rash. If there is no rash, the symptoms can be difficult to diagnose because they can be mistaken for numerous other diseases.

In cases where there is no rash or the diagnosis is questionable, doctors can do a blood test. If there is a rash, but it does not resemble the usual shingles outbreak, skin scrapings from the sores can also be used.

Quiz

1. The most common symptom of shingles is a sore throat.

FALSE is the correct answer. Pain tends to be the worst of the shingles symptoms -- and the most common. In an otherwise healthy person, coughing and sore throat would not be associated with shingles.

2. Most people get the rash on the rib cage, chest, back, or face.

TRUE is the correct answer. The shingles rash tends to occur from the waist upward, in the areas nearest to the spinal nerve path. In a few cases, the rash breaks out in the lower body.

3. The pain usually disappears within 48 to 72 hours.

FALSE is the correct answer. More than 50 percent of shingles patients over 60 will have pain that continues for several months.

4. A rash that appears on only one side of the body is the most distinctive symptom of shingles.

TRUE is the correct answer. When the virus reactivates, it tends to follow a single nerve path, so it will break out on either one side of the body or the other. The combination of pain, rash, and blisters -- all on one side of the body -- is the hallmark of a shingles diagnosis.

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