Varicella Disease Background

Last updated: 15 December 2025

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Introduction

Varicella  

Varicella is a self-limiting systemic infectious disease caused by primary varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection, characterized by fever, malaise and generalized, pruritic, vesicular rash. It is also known as chickenpox but only occurs in humans.  

Herpes Zoster  

Herpes Zoster results from recrudescence of latent VZV from dorsal root or cranial nerve ganglia that has been present since primary infection with varicella. It is also known as shingles.

Epidemiology

Varicella occurs worldwide with peak incidence among school-aged children in temperate climates in contrast to tropical climates, where infection tends to be more common later in childhood and with greater susceptibility among adults. In tropical climates, the highest incidence of disease occurs during the driest and coolest months.  

Higher incidence of herpes zoster and its complications was observed in females compared with males in the Asia-Pacific regions. Furthermore, age was also an important factor, showing decreasing incidence of herpes zoster in higher age groups, which differs from United States and Europe. 

Pathophysiology

Varicella  

Varicella transmits from person to person through inhalation of aerosolized vesicular fluid from skin lesions. Varicella zoster virus can also spread by direct contact with the vesicular fluid of skin lesions and infected respiratory tract secretions. The incubation period is 10-21 days, with an average of 14-16 days. It is highly infectious to non-immunized contacts 24-48 hours before the appearance of the rash until 5-6 days after the onset of the rash, during which vesicles have evolved into dried crusts. After recovery from infection, the virus remains dormant in dorsal root ganglia and may reactivate later as herpes zoster once the host becomes immunocompromised.  

Herpes Zoster  

VZV initially enters epidermal cells and manifests as the typical varicella rash, moves into sensory nerves at mucocutaneous sites then travels by retrograde axonal transport to the sensory dorsal root ganglia, where the virus remains non-infectious in its latent form inside neuronal cell bodies until reactivated. It is less contagious than varicella but may cause varicella in susceptible persons. The risk of developing herpes zoster increases with age.  

Etiology

Varicella zoster virus is a herpesvirus that comes from the Herpesviridae family that causes varicella and herpes zoster.