Publication:
Annual pattern and clinical characteristics of herpes zoster in immunocompetent children in a rural area

Placeholder

Departments

Organizational Unit

School / College / Institute

Organizational Unit
SCHOOL OF MEDICINE
Upper Org Unit

Program

KU Authors

Co-Authors

Gündoğdu, Mustafa
Karagün, Ebru
Acıpayam, Ayşe Şermin Filiz

Publication Date

Language

Embargo Status

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Alternative Title

Abstract

This study aims to investigate the clinical signs, symptoms, complications and seasonal distribution of herpes zoster for otherwise healthy children and to demonstrate the outcome of varicella vaccinations on the herpes zoster incidence in a pediatric population. A retrospective study was conducted by using the data of the pediatric patients who were referred to two rural cities of Turkey, clinically diagnosed as Herpes Zoster (HZ). All participants were evaluated for clinical-epidemiological factors, signs, symptoms, complications and varicella vaccination status for HZ. This study was comprised of 69 pediatric patients (29 [42%] female and 40 [58%] male) who were diagnosed with HZ. The mean age was 10.57 (6 months-17) years old. The rash of HZ mostly appeared on the thoracic dermatome as seen in 29 patients. The findings revealed that among 56 unvaccinated patients of all, 25 (44.6%) had a painful rash, in comparison among vaccinated patients none reported pain as the characterization of shingles (P = .001). Annual distribution of cases showed two peaks (March and September), whereas in August no cases were detected. of all participants, one patient had postherpetic neuralgia, who also had ophthalmic dermatomal involvement, and this was the only complication observed in this study cohort. In immunocompetent children, the most common involvement site was the thoracic dermatome. Our findings show that varicella vaccination has a protective role in the herpes zoster clinic, both by decreasing the prevalence and by making the infection course less severe.

Source

Publisher

Wiley-Hindawi

Subject

Dermatology

Citation

Has Part

Source

Dermatologic Therapy

Book Series Title

Edition

DOI

10.1111/dth.14570

item.page.datauri

Link

Rights

Copyrights Note

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

0

Views

0

Downloads

View PlumX Details