0521779407-22 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:23
Varicella-Zoster 1515
■Incubation periods: usually 14–16 days (10–21 days) (may be pro-
longed after passive immunization)
■Primary infection; chickenpox, reactivation; “shingles”
Signs & Symptoms
■Chickenpox – primary infection varicella-zoster; acute, generalized
viral disease
➣Fever
➣Mild constitutional symptoms
➣Skin eruption; initially maculopapular, later vesicular (×3–4
days)
➣Lesions commonly occur in successive crops
➣Lesions often high number covered versus non-covered area
➣More severe in adults/adolescents
■Shingles
➣Local manifestation of latent varicella infection in dorsal root
ganglia
➣Vesicles restricted to skin areas of sensory nerves (1–3 sensory
dermatomes)
➣Severe pain/paresthesia common
➣Systemic symptoms are few
➣More common in elderly or immunosuppressed
tests
■Usually a clinical diagnosis
➣can culture vesicles but not practicable in most settings
➣DFA/Tzanck smear of lesion
■Serology (ELISA, IFA) limited utility in acute setting – can retrospec-
tively confirm care
■PCR is available in some settings
differential diagnosis
n/a
management
■Susceptible persons at high risk for developing severe varicella – give
VZIG w/in 96 h, give as soon as possible with exposure.
■May be treated with acyclovir, valacyclovir, famciclovir, and foscarnet
■Therapy should be initiated early to maximize efficacy
■Oral therapy can be used for otherwise healthy persons, persons on
long-term salicylate therapy and persons on short course steroids.
■Immunocompromised patients; intravenous therapy