Shingles (Herpes Zoster) : Risk Factors

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Varicella, or chickenpox, is an acute communicable disease characterized by a generalized vesicular rash. Because it is highly contagious, most individuals contract it in childhood.
Source:Elsevier
Chickenpox (also called varicella) is a common and extremely infectious childhood disease that also affects adults on occasion. It produces an itchy, blistery rash that typically lasts about a week and is sometimes accompanied by a fever or other symptoms.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine
Chickenpox is one of the classic childhood diseases, and one of the most contagious. The affected child or adult may develop hundreds of itchy, fluid-filled blisters that burst and form crusts. Chickenpox is caused by a virus. The virus that causes chickenpox is varicella-zoster, a member of the herpesvirus family. The same virus also causes herpes zoster (shingles) in adults.
Source:ADAM
Date:July 26, 2007
Detailed information on chickenpox, including symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, complications, and immunity
Source:StayWell
Varicella-zoster virus is the causal agent of varicella (chickenpox) and herpes zoster (shingles). Varicella, the primary varicella-zoster virus infection, is predominantly a childhood disease in non-vaccinated populations.
Source:Elsevier
Chickenpox (also called varicella) is a common, extremely infectious, rash-producing childhood disease that also affects adults on occasion. Chickenpox is caused by the varicella-zoster virus (a member of the herpes virus family), which is spread through the air or by direct contact with an infected person.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Children's Health
Detailed information on chickenpox, including symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, complications, and immunity
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on varicella, more commonly known as chickenpox
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on chickenpox, including symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, complications, and immunity
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on chickenpox, including symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, complications, and immunity
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on chickenpox, including symptoms, diagnosis, treatment, complications, and immunity
Source:StayWell
Chickenpox (varicella) is a common and extremely infectious childhood disease that also occasionally affects adults. It produces an itchy, blistery rash that typically lasts about a week and is sometimes accompanied by a fever or other symptoms.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine
Highly contagious childhood disease caused by the varicella zoster virus, and for which there is a vaccine to provide immunity. Chicken pox is a highly contagious childhood disease that, until the vaccine became available in the mid-1990s, affected nearly all children under the age of ten years.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence
Chickenpox and whooping cough, once thought to strike only in childhood, increasingly occur among adults. Vaccines for both diseases may be available as early as 2006.
Source:StayWell
Disease commonly known as chicken pox. Varicella, commonly known as chicken pox, is a highly contagious disease for which a vaccine became available in the 1990s.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence
A chronic illness is a disease that has a prolonged course, does not resolve spontaneously, and rarely is completely cured. Typical examples include cancer, heart disease, diabetes, and arthritis.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Public Health
If you can't regain your health, you can still recover control of your life. You not only can learn to live with the disease, you can learn to live well.
Source:StayWell
Learning about your condition and doing your best to manage it can help you live a less fearful and more expansive life.
Source:StayWell
Although anyone can suffer from depression, it is particularly common among older adults. Depression affects 15 out of every 100 adults older than 65.
Source:StayWell
Dealing with stress isn’t easy. And being tired or in pain can make stress worse. Learning to control stress does take effort. Yet reducing stress can help you stay healthy.
Source:StayWell
Any trip requires advance planning so you can be comfortable and lower your risk for worsening symptoms.
Source:StayWell
Unlike the flu that you can treat and resolve, chronic diseases are unpredictable and ever-present. But they're also manageable, with the right medical attention, a healthy attitude and smart lifestyle choices.
Source:StayWell
Here are ways to help you fine-tune your lifestyle to promote optimum health.
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on psychological complications of chronic illness and teens
Source:StayWell
In a new study, chronically ill patients report an overall satisfaction with life equal to that of healthy individuals.
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on psychological complications of chronic illness and teens
Source:StayWell
Stress is defined as an organism ' s total response to environmental demands or pressures. When stress was first studied in the 1950s, the term was used to denote both the causes and the experienced effects of these pressures.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Medicine
Stress can come from any situation or thought that makes you feel frustrated, angry, or anxious. What is stressful to one person is not necessarily stressful to another. Anxiety is a feeling of apprehension or fear. The source of this uneasiness is not always known or recognized, which can add to the distress you feel.
Source:ADAM
Date:July 27, 2007
In this report you'll learn about a multitude of techniques that can help reduce stress, including breath focus, progressive muscle relaxation, meditation, yoga, massage, and more.
Source:StayWell
Everyone feels stress from time to time. It's a fact of daily life. Stress has its upside, but too much of it can leave you feeling out of control. And chronic stress can have negative consequences on your health.
Source:StayWell
Disturbance in the physiology of the individual. Among psychologists and psychiatrists, stress refers to a psychological reaction within the person to events that generate strong emotion that cannot be easily regulated; for other social scientists, the term stress is used to describe a disturbance in the individual ' s physiology.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Childhood and Adolescence
Knowing the causes of your stress will help you find ways to manage it.
Source:StayWell
Sometimes no matter how hard and fast you work, you miss your deadline, adding to your physical and emotional stress.
Source:StayWell
Stress is defined as an organism's total response to environmental demands or pressures. When stress was first studied in the 1950s, the term was used to denote both the causes and the experienced effects of these pressures.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Nursing and Allied Health
Ways to manage stress: Get enough sleep, follow a healthy diet and make time for yourself.
Source:StayWell
When you're faced with a highly stressful event in your life, the strategies outlined here will help you cope.
Source:StayWell
By consciously learning to be present and mindful, you can transform your inattention to attention and your stress into solutions.
Source:StayWell
Many people believe stress is all in the mind. But dealing with stressful situations can have physiological consequences.
Source:StayWell
Some stress is inevitable, but as you grow older, the key is to minimize stress while maximizing happiness and enjoyment.
Source:StayWell
Detailed information on women and managing stress
Source:StayWell
If you take a healthy attitude toward stress in your travel plans, the payoffs include improved physical well-being, mental alertness and better job performance.
Source:StayWell
Lower your risk: Control stress. When you’re stressed, your heartbeat speeds up and your blood pressure skyrockets. The next time you feel tension taking over, sit back and look at what’s bothering you.
Source:StayWell
Yoga is one of the few stress-relief tools that has a positive effect on all the body systems involved.
Source:StayWell
Recent studies are changing our notion about why men develop impotence. While it was once believed that psychological problems were the main cause, we now understand that medical factors -- such as poor blood flow, nerve damage, and medication side effects -- play an important role in most cases of impotence.
Source:StayWell
Practicing deep, focused breathing is a relaxation technique that can help alleviate stress, which in turn will likely have positive effects on general health and well-being.
Source:StayWell
A British study suggests a link between increased stress and a rise in cholesterol level, and a follow-up several years later showed the trend continued over time.
Source:StayWell
By understanding what is causing you stress, you may be able to make changes to help you feel more in control.
Source:StayWell
Your wedding day can be one of the best days of your life, it can also be one of the most stressful.
Source:StayWell
As a working parent, do you need some relief from the stress of managing a career and a family?
Source:StayWell
New research shows that prolonged stress can accelerate the aging of body cells.
Source:StayWell
Over the course of evolution, the human mind and body have developed means of handling stressful situations. Over the short term, such stress response pathways are highly adaptive, allowing a person to manage his or her resources in order to navigate the crisis; in some cases, however, these processes go awry and result in pathology.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Public Health
Definitions Stress is a term that refers to the sum of the physical, mental, and emotional strains or tensions on a person. Feelings of stress in humans result from interactions between persons and their environment that are perceived as straining or exceeding their adaptive capacities and threatening their well-being.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Mental Disorders
Stress is an individual ' s physical and mental reaction to environmental demands or pressures. When stress was first studied, the term was used to denote both the causes and the experienced effects of these pressures.
Source:Gale Encyclopedia of Alternative Medicine
Women experience symptoms of stress 30 percent more often than men, research has shown.
Source:StayWell
No one can avoid all stress -- and a certain amount actually is good for you. But it's always best to keep unhealthy levels in check when possible.
Source:StayWell
Mental stress does more than diminish your sense of well-being. It also can increase your risk for heart disease.
Source:StayWell
During stressful times, your body produces various chemicals, including cortisol, an immune-suppressing hormone. The more cortisol produced, the weaker your immune cells become and the more susceptible you are to illness.
Source:StayWell
My fingertips have recently started peeling. I have been under a considerable amount of stress lately. Could there be any correlation?
Source:StayWell
What is the relationship between stress and infertility? Joan Bengtson, M.D., is assistant professor of obstetrics, gynecology and reproductive biology at Harvard Medical School and a member of the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproduction at Brigham and Women's Hospital.
Source:StayWell
In experiments on mice, suppressing a chemical linked to stress and appetite prevented the formation of abdominal fat cells, which could lead to new possibilities for weight loss drugs.
Source:StayWell
Resilience is the ability to handle stressful events and remain mentally strong and healthy. The presence of a certain form of neurochemical may be one explanation for why some people are more resilient than others.
Source:StayWell
Guidelines from the American Heart Association and the American College of Cardiology offer advice on protecting the heart during noncardiac surgery.
Source:StayWell
Stress tests are not recommended unless you experience chest pain or tightness during exercise or other activities that stress the heart.
Source:StayWell
Anything that brings on feelings of stress is called a stressor. Today, we often face many stressors.
Source:StayWell
To manage your stress, you must first learn to recognize when you are under stress. Every one reacts to stress differently; find out how you respond to stressful situations.
Source:StayWell
Stress is a powerful force for good and for ill. It can help us cope with life's challenges, but it can also affect our health by making pre-existing conditions worse or even bringing on new ones.
Source:StayWell
No matter the source of your stress, it can produce physical, mental, and emotional symptoms that can affect any part of the body.
Source:StayWell
The more you learn about the pressure times and triggers at your workplace, the better you'll be able to plan for them.
Source:StayWell
Whether your credit card balances are soaring, or you and your partner are arguing constantly over nickels and dimes, there are things you can do to relieve financial stress.
Source:StayWell
Here are suggestions on how to avoid and deal with the stresses in your life.
Source:StayWell
The formula for success at work is not only hard work, but also frequent breaks for mental and physical rest.
Source:StayWell
You're familiar with the symptoms of stress -- a pounding heart, increased perspiration, tight neck and shoulder muscles, anxiety and fear. But you may not know how to prevent or relieve these symptoms.
Source:StayWell
Pneumonia in an immunocompromised host describes a lung infection that occurs in a person whose ability to fight infection is greatly impaired.
Source:ADAM
Date:August 6, 2007
Discharge Instructions for Immunocompromised PatientsYou have either undergone a procedure or been diagnosed with an illness that has made you "immunocompromised." This means that your immune system is very weak, making it difficult to fight off i...
Source:StayWell
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