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Shingles - good advice but also a warning!

(32 Posts)
MawBroon Mon 07-Jan-19 10:13:53

From this morning’s DT this may be worth remembering for future use

Finally, further to the ingenious remedy for preventing the painful sensitivity of a shingles rash by positioning a plastic bag over it (held in place by Sellotape), a reader recalls how back in 1946 (!), his wise old family doctor advised he use a man’s silk handkerchief for the same purpose. “It is still in my possession,” he writes. Better still, Trish Rees, a retired staff nurse, commends a sheet of cling film as more effective and less likely to become dislodged.
Meanwhile, it is not just those who have had an attack of shingles in the past who should avoid the vaccine against it, now routinely offered to people aged 70 and 78. For a reader with long-standing psoriasis, it caused “the mother of all flare-ups – from a few small patches to covering almost my entire body
The specialist told him he “regularly” sees this adverse effect of the vaccine, about which most family doctors are apparently unaware

Food for thought. .

Franbern Thu 23-Dec-21 08:19:58

I always thought of Shingles as being totally an illness effecting older adults. However, one of my g.daughters, aged 12 years has it at present. Not too bad with it, got started on anti-virals very quickly. But - poor thing- started it in her birthday. And, also has Covid now. Feeling quite miserable. Just hoping she is going to feel better by Cristmas.

Urmstongran Sun 12-Dec-21 21:23:06

bethover Sun 12-Dec-21 16:54:49

Reported.

rubysong Sun 12-Dec-21 20:34:00

I'm just about to be 70, so pondering on whether or not to have the shingles vaccination. I had shingles about ten years ago. I had a very small area of rash on my back but the pain around my ribs was horrid. We were camping in France when it started and on our way home by the time I realised what it was. (I had thought it was a midge bite and DH was putting antihistamine on it!) I remember being on the ferry home and finding a quiet place to go and have a cry, it was so painful. I went straight to the doctor when I got home and he gave me tablets but the pain went on for months. I think I will probably have the jab but I will feel anxious about it flaring up.

Jgju Sun 12-Dec-21 17:57:56

I first had shingles very badly 30 years ago, and I have had recurring attacks 2/3 times a year since. I have other underlying health issues. It is an awful painful condition, and if I am run down it appears again. I am not sure if I should be able to have the Vaccine in 2 years when I will be 70.

bethover71 Sun 12-Dec-21 16:54:49

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Buffybee Mon 14-Jan-19 19:07:28

You're blush

Buffybee Mon 14-Jan-19 19:06:23

Octogon26 there are lots of posters with this virus posting on the Health Forum on the thread Has anyone else got this lurgy?.
Yes! I have had it or a variation of it just after Boxing Day and just about feeling myself again.
You'll find lots of fellow sufferers to compare symptoms with and somehow it makes it better that your not on your own. flowers

blondenana Mon 14-Jan-19 18:45:44

I had shingles last year in February, just on my birthday,i had no idea until then that i could have had a vaccination, didnt even know there was one, never offered it
My shingles was very painful, and i had numbness around that are for a good 3 months
My sister had shingles before the vaccination, and also since,so is it worth it,

Octogon26 Mon 14-Jan-19 18:28:58

Hello everyone im new to this site im looking for advice and a little reassurance ive had the most dreadful cough for over two weeks now just finished a course of Amoxicillin and i really dont feel very much better to be honest ive no energy and i ache in places i didnt think you could ache its odd as i have had the flu jab . I had a nasty headcold over christmas that went onto my chest hence the Antibiotic i was hoping i would be feeling more like myself by now is it possible ive had flu even after vaccine any advice appreciated i cant get into see my Gp for another week im so tired of feeling so dreadful thanks for listening

Sunlover Fri 11-Jan-19 08:50:07

I've had a mild shingles attack over the last couple of weeks. Well, I think it is shingles from reading up the symptoms but as I couldn't get to the doctors over Xmas and to be honest felt just a bit under the weather I haven't had it diagnosed. Think I got away very lightly. Small blistery rash that has crusted over and now starting to go. Slight tingling and itching but all very manageable.
Wondering wether to investigate the jab in the future.

Liz46 Fri 11-Jan-19 07:38:58

I had the shingles jab two years ago and remember it was a rather painful jab but apart from a sore arm, no problems. I know a few people who had shingles and all said it was awful.

travelsafar Fri 11-Jan-19 07:27:12

A good friend of mine had the jab but still got shingles a couple of years later.

It was over and in her eye and she now has to use drops everyday for her eye as it left her with a very painful ulcer at the back of the eye.

Months later she still has terrible head pain too.

harrigran Tue 08-Jan-19 09:55:28

I have had shingles twice and no desire to repeat the horrendous experience, I had the injection as soon as it was offered with no side effects.

NfkDumpling Tue 08-Jan-19 08:07:26

I’ve never had shingles and had the jab last November. No ill effects, except that the stiffness in my arm is still there, diminishing very slowly! I did have a flu jab in the same arm two weeks prior to the shingles, so perhaps the overload was too much.

M0nica Tue 08-Jan-19 07:25:33

It is a question of balancing probabilities . The probability of having shingles if you do not have the jab against a much lower probability of a mild reaction if you do.

Having seen three cases of shingles in my family and chicken pox being the one childhood illness which I had badly, I had no doubts about having the jab.

BlueBelle Tue 08-Jan-19 05:44:47

I had the jab 4 years ago in ignorance sometimes you read so many different fors and against that you don’t know what to do for the best so I just said yes and bingo like dragonfly no problems for me either

dragonfly46 Mon 07-Jan-19 21:22:58

My DH and I have both had the jab and no I’ll effects.

MawBroon Mon 07-Jan-19 21:14:51

OK sorry - misunderstood!

M0nica Mon 07-Jan-19 21:09:00

Maw I was referring to *joannapiano's post. The consultant quoted in the DT article is referring to people suffering from psoriasis and in my first post I refer to problems those with pre-existing conditions may have with any other medication.

I did a bit of searching and the only references I found referred to rare cases where the the jab causes a mild chicken pox rash for a few days. No mention at all of people developing full on shingles after the jab asjoanna suggests.

My DS developed measles a few months after receiving the measles jab, but it was a very mild compared with the full-on measles I remembered from my childhood.

MawBroon Mon 07-Jan-19 20:52:41

M0nica the paragraph I quoted in my OP came from this morning’s Health column in the DT

M0nica Mon 07-Jan-19 20:14:54

Shingles is caused by the chicken pox virus dormant in your body reoccurring. How can you tell whether getting shingles after the jab causes a reoccurance and it wasn't just the normal process for getting it?

I would be interested in reading the evidence you have found that the shingles jab itself does that. Can you give me a reference?

TwiceAsNice Mon 07-Jan-19 20:09:25

I have had shingles twice both times on my face in my cheek area below the same eye. GP gave me anti viral drugs but I had to go back to be check as it it had got worse he said Id have to go to the eye clinic in case of complications. It made me feel really ill but luckily I did not get any post viral pain either time

joannapiano Mon 07-Jan-19 19:52:21

I had shingles when I was 21, along my sciatic nerve across my back. The pain was so awful that I slept with a low coffee table across my body in bed, as I couldn’t bare the weight of bedclothes to touch my rash.
I shall refuse the shingles jab after reading that it can make the shingles virus dormant in my body, re-occur.

M0nica Mon 07-Jan-19 19:19:47

Optical shingles is most common in the elderly See this link www.summitmedicalgroup.com/library/adult_health/oph_herpes_zoster_shingles_eye_infections/ .

It took them 4 days to diagnose DD's as she was in her early 20s. Diagnosis was instant once the rash appeared

Charleygirl5 Mon 07-Jan-19 12:31:54

In theory, one should only acquire shingles once but in practice that does not happen, many acquire it more than once.

Yes, Nina one can get it in the eye and it has to be treated quickly to stand a chance of no lasting damage.