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Monitoring
Further evaluation is needed, especially in immunocompromised patients.
Observe for other bacterial, neurologic, respiratory, hepatic and hematologic
complications in VZV infection. Appearance of rash in dermatomal distribution
that is predictive of herpes zoster which usually follows a latent period of
many years.
Observe for the following in herpes zoster:
- Other bacterial, neurologic, ophthalmic, respiratory, hepatic and hematologic complications
- Persistent pain after 1-3 months of rash resolution is suggestive of PHN
Complications
Varicella
Immunocompromised patients, neonates and adults
(especially pregnant women) are most at risk for complications. The most common
complication among healthy children is bacterial superinfection caused by Staphylococcus
aureus or Streptococcus pyogenes that manifests as impetigo,
furuncles, cellulitis, erysipelas or bullous skin lesions. A life-threatening
disease known as necrotizing fasciitis has been reported as a complication in
children. Extracutaneous complications are often neurologic, which includes
acute cerebellar ataxia and meningoencephalitis. Reye’s syndrome, transverse
myelitis, polyradiculitis, and Guillain-Barré syndrome may also occur but are
rare. Varicella pneumonia is the leading
cause of varicella-associated morbidity among adults, pregnant individuals and immunocompromised
individuals. Less frequent complications are arthritis, myocarditis and glomerulonephritis.
Transient hepatitis occurs in most children and is usually asymptomatic, but
fulminant liver failure may occur. Immune-mediated thrombocytopenia is
associated with bleeding into skin lesions, petechiae, purpura, epistaxis, hematuria
and GI hemorrhage.
Herpes Zoster
Postherpetic Neuralgia (PHN)
PHN is characterized as pain that persists in the affected area after
resolution of the rash or for ≥3 months after onset of the rash. It is a common
and debilitating complication of herpes zoster. The incidence of PHN is
age-related and affects approximately 50% of patients >60 years old. Patient
may experience constant pain (described as burning, aching or throbbing),
intermittent pain (described as stabbing or shooting) and stimulus-evoked pain
such as allodynia, which is defined as pain triggered by a non-painful stimulus
(eg wind or a piece of clothing).
Ophthalmic Zoster (Herpes Zoster Ophthalmicus)
Ophthalmic zoster begins with fever, headache,
decreased vision, droopy eyelid and a generalized feeling of being unwell
accompanied by pain or extreme sensitivity of the eye, forehead and top of the
head. One of the frequent complications of herpes zoster involving the
nasociliary branch of the trigeminal nerve and has the potential to produce
corneal ulceration accompanied by ocular palsy, lid ptosis, conjunctivitis, panophthalmitis,
retinal vasculitis, retinal artery occlusion, optic neuritis, choroidal detachment,
glaucoma and visual impairment which may lead to loss of vision.
Acute Retinal Necrosis (ARN)
ARN is seen in patients with a history of herpes encephalitis and some
immunocompetent patients. Rapid progression is characteristic in advanced
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) with an 82% chance of bilateral eye
involvement and 70% sustain retinal detachment. Patients complain of blurring of vision and pain
in the affected eye. Clinical features include acute iridocyclitis, vitritis,
necrotizing retinitis, occlusive retinal vasculitis with rapid vision loss and
retinal detachment. It causes a high rate of visual loss.
Progressive Outer Retinal Necrosis (PORN)
PORN occurs in AIDS patients with a CD4 count of <100 cells/μL. Ocular
findings include minimal inflammation in the aqueous and vitreous humor,
absence of retinal vasculitis, and multiple discrete peripheral lesions in the
outer retinal layer. Lesions rapidly coalesce causing full-thickness retinal
necrosis and subsequent retinal detachment. PORN causes high rates of vision
loss.
Ramsay Hunt Syndrome
It is also known as herpes zoster oticus. It is
a polycranial neuropathy with frequent involvement of cranial nerves V, IX and
X. Ramsay Hunt Syndrome is reported in association with HSV type 2. Patients
may experience ear pain, hearing loss, vertigo, facial nerve palsy and lesions
in the auricle and auditory canal. A less
common complication involving the geniculate ganglion of the facial nerve
presents as peripheral facial nerve palsy, tinnitus, vertigo, deafness,
otalgia, loss of taste, vesicles on the ear, hard palate or tongue (herpes zoster
oticus), nausea and vomiting.
Disseminated Herpes Zoster
Disseminated herpes zoster can be serious to life-threatening. It spreads
to other organs but mostly affects the lungs. Immunocompromised patients are more
prone to danger. This occurs in patients with a CD4 count of <200 cells/μL. In
patients with HIV co-infections, the CNS is the primary target. Symptoms
include CNS vasculitis, multifocal leukoencephalitis, ventriculitis, myelitis and
myeloradiculitis, optic neuritis, cranial nerve palsies, focal brainstem
lesions and aseptic meningitis.
Zoster-associated Encephalitis
Delirium may occur a few days after vesicular eruption, before the onset
of rash, or ≥6 months after a zoster episode. Most cases occur in
immunosuppressed patients (eg HIV-infected individuals). Major risk factors
include cranial or cervical dermatomal involvement, ≥2 prior episodes of
zoster, disseminated herpes zoster and impaired cell-mediated immunity.
Stroke Syndromes
Stroke occurs secondary to infection of cerebral arteries, which may be
due to direct VZV invasion of the arterial surface via spread along the
intracranial branches of the trigeminal nerve. Granulomatous angiitis or
ischemic stroke syndrome involves inflammation of the internal carotid artery
or its branches from extension of infection in the trigeminal ganglion. It presents
as an abrupt onset of severe headache and rapid evolution to contralateral
motor weakness.
Other Complications
Dermatologic superinfections involve impetigo, cellulitis, necrotizing
fasciitis and herpes gangrenosum. Transient segmental paralysis results in abdominal
wall hernia and bladder dysfunction. Neurologic complications include meningoencephalitis,
myelitis and zoster paresis depending on the affected dermatome (eg
diaphragmatic paralysis, altered mentation).
