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Tell me about Shingles

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[#13531245]

 

 

Got some blisters appeared on my right leg.

Skin is tender to touch in places.

Feel like shit, but not debilitatingly so.

Upset stomach.

Lymph nodes area is a bit achy, so they are clearly putting a shift in.

 

…and family holiday in 8 days.

 

This started up a couple of days ago, but does it get worse?

 

Looking at Dr Google and the NHS it would appear that I’m just going to have to put up with it.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:09 am
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Had it when I was 18 - it's a bit crap but not too bad.  Biggest issue was resisting the urge to scratch the [very itchy] blisters.

No idea if I had any treatment for it (Mum was in the nursing profession) but it was too long ago for comfort.

8 days?  I think you'll be OK but obvs IANAD

Edit: Interestingly I had a single small patch of blisters last summer that looked exactly like shingles, but it didn't spread and I felt fine.  Went away after a couple of weeks 🤷‍♂️


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:16 am
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Blisters are in three small clumps. Biggest patch is about 2x4 cm. Other patches half the size.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:23 am
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Sounds right.
I remember something being painted on the blisters that made them itch like mad - bit as I said, it was a long time ago and I wouldn't be surprised if leaches were used!


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:30 am
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yep had it about 20 years ago - "clumps" of chicken pox style blisters on my left arm, side leg. Had a back back before hand and couldn't think of a reason why (lower back) - then out came the blisters - at which point I was in the Czech republic on business - when I got back - GP basically said rest and avoid pregnant women. Was lucky really - I know it can be much worse for some people. Wife paid for the jab.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:31 am
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Isn't the standard STW response 'cat aids'...?

Sorry, have nothing sensible to add except virtual tea and real sympathy. AIUI, Shingles is horrible and incurable. You can get inoculated on the NHS if you're 65 or over IIRC. Or, privately for around £400. Apparently effective even if you have it.

Bon chance.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:32 am
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Shingles aren't contagious (they are a flare-up of the dormant chickenpox virus that has lived in your body since you contracted it). If someone (who hasn't had chickenpox) touched the fluid from a blister, they could contract chickenpox, but not shingles. Just avoid anyone that is at risk (ie, pregnant women and babies).

In itself, shingles can vary from mildly inconvenient to really painful.

FWIW, I got shingles just before a skiing holiday years ago and the GP told me I could travel if I felt up to it, so I did.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:36 am
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Posted by: johndoh

In itself, shingles can vary from mildly inconvenient to really painful.

And far beyond that. The former president of one of my cycling clubs spent many months in hospital with shingles which left him with permanent nerve and brain damage. Although he was already elderly shingles took him to an early grave and left him severely disabled in his rather unpleasant final years 

Obviously that was an extreme case and the overwhelming cases of shingles are very mild in comparison but I don't think it pays to be too dismissive.

And in the case of my club president I am convinced that his determination to push his body to extremes with high bike milage and strenuous rides, despite his advancing years, probably weaken his immune system to the point where the dormant chicken pox virus was able to get a particularly strong hold.

 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:18 am
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I have posted this before but here is the story of my former club president and his battle with shingles 

https://anerleybc.org/cyclist-recycled/


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:22 am
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I came back from last years Duncfest with shingles (I’m not blaming Duncfest). I felt like shit for a few weeks, but I was suffering with pain from it for months

A pharmacy can diagnose it so you don’t need to go to the doctor, and give you some medication 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:32 am
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For balance I had shingles but it was never more than an itchy rash. I didn't know I had it until one of my work colleagues suggested it.

I just work throughout but didn't feel at all unwell.

The vacine however made me feel crap for two weeks for both doses.

I hope the op gets better soon and doesn't develop any nasty effects.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:33 am
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It is by all accounts horrible,  an old virology professor of mine described when shingles circles the trunk of the body as 'exquisite pain'. Once this flare up has gone look at getting the shingles vaccination if you can


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:36 am
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Speak to the doctor and get some aciclover (from memory) to stop it in it's tracks.

I used get shingles across my face. Probably why I get the aciclover as a matter of urgency.


 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:50 am
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A few years back I was getting sharp stabbing pains in the left side of my chest so went to the GP to get checked out. They confirmed no sign of any heart issue but the pain continued and the next day Mrs P spotted a small rash on my back - out of hours gp this time who confirmed it was shingles and prescribed some anti virals and some hefty pain killers. For the next week or two I lived by the clock of when I could take those pain killers - I couldn't tolerate any contact with the skin on the left side of my torso but fortunately it was a hot spell so I was warm enough without a shirt. After the rash went it was months before the occasional reminder of the pain subsided.

OTOH MrsP got it and had a bit of a rash on her leg, mostly felt OK and in between resting she made some new curtains.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 11:55 am
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Update:

 

Work have sent me home as someone in the office is pregnant.

Pharmacy told me to see my GP.

GP have no appointments and told me to call 111.

111 have me booked in for 1:00pm today at the GP thingie in the local hospital.

 

Exciting. And itchy.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 12:01 pm
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I got it after my kids were born - almost 30 years. I was totally knocked off my feet for a week. Even 30 years later, the scarred area on my side is still sensitive and almost painful from time to time.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 12:01 pm
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Even 30 years later, the scarred area on my side is still sensitive and almost painful from time to time.

I know what you mean – mine took a good 10 years to stop being uncomfortable from time to time, but I can still feel/sense exactly where the centre of the pain was to this day – it is etched in my mind.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 12:07 pm
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I had it last year, and it was by far the most painful thing I've had in my adult life. I got in the ribs, running round from my spine to the sternum on the right hand side of my body. It was excruciating, and I found it impossible to sleep for more than an hour at a time for about a week. (It was sort of similar to when you break a rib, and there's no way to get comfortable in bed...) The serious phase was probably a couple of weeks, but the pain (steadily getting better) was there at least 2-3 months after.

No lasting effects in my case, but apparently you can also get it in your optic nerve, with the possibility of blindness in one eye. Certainly I wouldn't necessarily take the disease lightly!

 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 12:09 pm
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I got it in my right testicle.

I don't think it needs much more detail than that 😂 other than I did get to amuse myself with the usual GP reception questioning.

"I'm sorry Sir but as you rang at 8:30:00.001 we have already filled all the appointments today unless you can tell me why it's urgent"

"My right testicle is considerably larger than the left, and it isn't normally"

"............................."

"............................."

".............. ohh, you could have just said it was personal"

"well then you wouldn't have found me an appointment would you?"

"Can you come in at 17:30?"

Dr didn't immediately find the problem, it took a few days for the virus to carry on down the nerve into my leg and show up as the characteristic rash on my inner thigh then I got the antivirals as a precaution to stop it spreading further.   I think that's standard procedure even though they aren't supposed to be effective unless you take them at the beginning (i.e. before any definitive symptoms).   

 

 

 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 1:01 pm
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Speak to the doctor and get some aciclover (from memory) to stop it in it's tracks.

I think that process is supposed to have been streamlined as time is of the essence, you need to start treatment as quickly as possible to get any meaningful benefit - so these days you should be able to go straight to your pharmacist for assessment and treatment as going via a GP takes too long. Which is a great idea in every sense except nobody seems to know about it.

 

Pharmacy told me to see my GP.

Try another pharmacist maybe

 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 1:06 pm
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For goodness sakes people! Standards. Oh, I'll do it myself then:

Shingletrackworld.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 1:48 pm
leffeboy, grahamt1980, scaredypants and 1 people reacted
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^ Very good, I approve.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 1:54 pm
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Posted by: thisisnotaspoon

"My right testicle is considerably larger than the left, and it isn't normally"

Did it fulfill the criteria for Wun Hung Lo ?

https://shop.wunhunglo.com.au/


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 2:15 pm
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Iirc shingles can cause sensitivity to sunlight so be careful where you are heading on holiday.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 4:19 pm
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It is (by a country mile) the worst thing I have ever had.

I spent a horrible 5 weeks in extreme discomfort, while watching the clock countdown between pain meds.

A tiny rash was the only sign before it arrived at full power. 

I hope you get off light OP,I would not wish the version I had on anyone.

Oh, and DO NOT Goggle Shingles on Image,some of the worst cases will give you nightmares.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 4:39 pm
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Read this, Harry (it's what yr doctor or pharmacist will/should do) https://cks.nice.org.uk/topics/shingles/management/management/

The diagnosis stuff needs to be made by them but you can have an idea in your mind of what treatments are goers (high dose aciclovir 800mg 5x daily is the usual dose and I believe aciclovir is offered as standard if you're over 50, regardless of anything else). Earlier aciclovir is started, the better the outcome for the patient

Various pain relief options exist, so again have an idea of how severe you consider it and read accordingly.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 4:55 pm
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Oh, and phone a couple of pharmacies and ask if they are Pharmacy First practices - those are the ones that should manage this without a doc


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 5:00 pm
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No lasting effects in my case, but apparently you can also get it in your optic nerve, with the possibility of blindness in one eye. Certainly I wouldn't necessarily take the disease lightly!

 

I had in in my right trigeminal nerve. Bloody painful.
The first time I had it, it got close to my eye before I rang 111. They told me to go to A&E where they had booked me an appointment with an eye specialist. I was put straight onto the Aciclover and an antiviral cream 
I’ve only had it a few times since and each time it has been less severe, mostly down to catching it early.  I mostly seem to start with it when I am very rundown.

I can recognise the signs that it is on its way at an early stage, tired, rundown, pain above right ear and a tingling sensation over the right side of my face. Aciclover nice and early seems to stop it in its tracks.

 

 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 5:26 pm
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Oh, and phone a couple of pharmacies and ask if they are Pharmacy First practices

I'd be calling the Pharmacy that send you away to the docs instead of giving you that advice and giving them a bollocking


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 5:30 pm
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Had it in 1997. Spent a week wimpering in a dark room, 2 weeks off work, 2 months to properly recover. I still have a tender spot on my chest where the worst of the lumps were, and you can see it when I tan.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 5:41 pm
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Had it for the first time a month or so ago and it was brutal.

Rash around my lower torso which felt like somebody sanding down sunburnt skin whenever anything (including clothes) touched it.

Felt like I'd been in a car crash for the first few days then it thankfully passed quickly but the rash lingered for over a fortnight.

If you can get them quickly - within 5 days of the rash appearing - anti viral meds can make a real difference. My rash never got worse than red bumps, no blisters or anything going gungy, and I'm sure the meds played a big part in this.

It was horrid though, sympathies!


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 6:16 pm
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Posted by: boblo

You can get inoculated on the NHS if you're 65 or over IIRC

 Not quite, the age criteria are very odd. Eligible if you're 70-79, or 65th birthday after 1 Sept 2023, so 65 to nearly 67 at present. If you're in the gap between you need to wait until you're 70. No idea why they're extending it to 65-70 by working from 65, maybe it's easier to calculate. I phoned the surgery for an appointment as soon as I was 70. Two stage jab, second one after 6 months.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 8:22 pm
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Work have sent me home as someone in the office is pregnant.

I didn't know that was a side effect of sharing an office with someone with Shingles...

If the OP wasn't scared shitless before, he should be now after all those^ horror stories...🙄


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 8:42 pm
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I had it on my back, it was a big itchy patch on one side and didn't cross the spine.  Only thing that relieved pain was going in the sea.  I had to wear a t shirt or I d have scared off other bathers.

It kept getting more painful, started as a dull thud type pain then a whole body ache.  If I d have bumped into someone it would have really hurt so I just stayed in and rested.

Lasted about a month.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 8:57 pm
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FWIW I went to the doctor's sometime in the first 72 hours or so, and got anti-viral meds. Despite this, and as mentioned above, I was in agony for a week, then chronic pain for the next 2-3 months. 


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 9:28 pm
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To give a counter point years ago years I went climbing with some mates of mates, one of whom was a GP. As I changed my top she asked me how I was feeling as she noticed a diagonal rash across my back and diagnosed shingles. I'd been feeling a bit run down for a couple of weeks but was otherwise ok. It didn't really get any worse and the rash disappeared a week later.


 
Posted : 17/07/2025 10:01 pm
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Posted by: boblo

You can get inoculated on the NHS if you're 65 or over IIRC.

I’ve got an appointment on Saturday afternoon.
I had chicken pox way back in the 70’s, but I got away with a fortnight off work having just gone back after the Christmas holiday, and a few itchy spots that I treated with medicated talcum powder. Other than feeling like crap for several days, once the spots showed up I felt right as rain!


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 12:19 am
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Lots more rash on my leg this morning and my lower back and groin aren't happy.

 

Awesome.


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 8:00 am
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does the pattern all lie on a dermatome?   Shingles typically follows a single dermatome in uncomplicated cases

Did you get the drugs ??

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dermatome_%28anatomy%29


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 8:19 am
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GP appointment later.

 

Looking at the diagram it is on L3 and immediately adjacent sections.


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 8:28 am
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If you get the anti-viral meds (fingers crossed) try and keep out of the sun whilst you're taking them. Makes your skin super-sensitive so it burns dead easily.

Good luck.


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 10:25 am
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 It wasn't so bad for me, just very itchy. I had a reaction to the Aciclovir and that was the worst I have ever felt.


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 10:56 am
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Diagnosed as Shingles. Got Aciclovir 5 times a day for a week.


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 5:42 pm
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Good Luck. The Anti-Virals properly wiped me out for a while, but (allegedly) made the symptoms better. It was about 4 weeks until I could walk the dog more than 15 minutes on flat ground 😒  That said the rest was just fatigue and rib pain/itching not end of the world stuff...

 


 
Posted : 18/07/2025 6:23 pm
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I had it 2 years ago. 

Wide band of red spots of different sizes round my lower back and torso 

Did online / phone consult with Gp and he prescribed anti virals and see how feel approach .

I worked through it and avoided pregnant women where it was obvious they were pregnant. 

Any pressure more then a T shirt was painful and made the rash itchy , but if you succumbed and itched the rash it was like someone angle grinding sparks straight at your skin at close range . Sleeping was a test , showering was also painful iirc . 

Took approx 10 days to clear up and stop feeling knackered. I dont think I had it too badly tbh . 


 
Posted : 19/07/2025 8:12 am
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