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If shingles cannot be spread to someone who has already had the chicken pox, how do you get shingles? |
i've heard that shingles can cause someone who hasn't had chicken pox, to get chicken pox. but they will not give someone who has had chicken pox, shingles. if this is true, how do you get shingles? Shingles is not infectious in the same way as chickenpox, where the virus can be passed on in coughs and sneezes. However, shingles is contagious. This means it can be passed on by direct contact. Fluid from shingles blisters can cause chickenpox in people who are not already immune. People with shingles should avoid those with a lowered immunity. Chickenpox is caused by the varicella virus. Once your body has recovered, the virus goes into "hibernation" in the nervous system. Later in life, when the immunity is down, the virus erupts over a nerve distribution again. This is called shingles or herpes zoster. It is the virus laying dormant in your body. It is stirred up do to stress or a compromised immune system. Shingles only occur in someone who has had chicken pox already. It is from the same virus and it never entirely leaves the system. When a person's immune system is compromised, "shingles" can appear from the virus that is already in your system. yes you can spread them even if the other person has had chickenpox but it is rare and you need to have contact with the shingles when they are scabby and crusting over they are at the contagious stage then Well shingles is chicken pox version 2... Shingles is a viral infection that is very similar to chicken pox, however it is not contagious in it's true form. shingles is a reactivation of the varacella zoster virus. a person cannot get shingles if they have never had chicken pox. Shingles is a retro virus from chicken pox. I got my shingles from Home Depot If memory serves correctly... you get shingles as a result of having chicken pox earlier in life. Something from it lays dormant in the bottom of your spine and sometimes, years later, this can flare up and turn into shingles. This is why, when someone has an attack of shingles, it will only appear somewhere on the torso or head, along the line of a nerve; because it is connected to your spine. So, for example, if you get shingles on the top of your head, it has travelled up your spine and chosen to break out there. I don't completely understand the first part of your question but I don't think shingles in contagious x When you have had Chicken Pox, you retain the ability to have shingles in your system. If the system is immunosuppresed or under stress (usually from some other medical condition or exhaustion) the herpes zoster can be activated and appear as a rash limited to a dermatome and causing moderate to severe neuralgia (nerve pain). Sorry, but shingles result from the herpes virus, herpes zooster. Cold sores are also dependent on a persons infection of chicken pox. Genital herpes is called HSV1. Both are incurable. HSV1 is probably the most genitally frequently transmitted STD. It can, really, be devastating to those who have it. The only prevention is the use of condoms. So, y'all go get some. And maintain your adamance about their use. Just look at shingles as the after taste of diet pop. You only get it after youve had chicken pox but only in the rare situation where everything lines up just pefectly. shingles does NOT come from the herpes virus...my mom had shingles,and they are not fun.They most always break out around your waist and chest area...can spread to face.They do lie dormant in your body,from chicken pox and later in life,usually after your 50's or 60's.they surface...doesn't happen to everyone.There is NO cure for shingles..and drs.will give you a cream to treat the small sores..look like chicken pox..and then turn to sm.red blisters.Shingles are not only on the skin surface they are deep into your skin and they are painful. Can even make you hurt all over. A person who has them is not a happy person...sometimes miserable,it goes and comes,but it is always there. Shingles only occurs in patients who have had a previous chickenpox infection. The virus remains dormant in the body, perhaps for ever. Something, being run down, the presence of other infections, the immune system being under par, or even intense UV light exposure, reactivates the virus. For reasons unclear it presents as a strip of infection only affecting a single dermatome ( area of skin supplies by one nerve ) on one side of the body. You are correct that this is then infectious only as chickenpox. On one occasion only I have seen a patient who had their chickenpox infection as an adult and developed shingles at the same time. Attacks of shingles do not give immunity to further episodes, but strangely the first attack of chickenpox gives generally lifelong immunity to another chickenpox infection. |
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