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I woke up two weeks ago with a sore rib cage. I thought it was from being an old codger and crawling around under my truck for several days, making some mods. Day after that I had this rash on my back/side, right where Mr. Springfield rides most of the time.

I went to see the doctor lady and she said "you have a case of Shingles. I can give you medication that will clear it right up." Yeah, about that.

The rash is pretty much healed up but the pain is still there and impressive. Seems like I had "prodromal pain" which means I had the pain before the rash. And I'm 50+, and I'm a white boy, so apparently I have a 15% chance of having this "neuralgia" for the rest of my life. That don't sound good. It hurts real good, though.

Guess back when I was a tadpole I had the chicken pox, I sorta seem to remember something about that. Not sure what woke it up but I'm sure hoping this is a one-time deal.

Can't sleep unless I eat hydrocodone and can't work if I do. Helluva mess. My neighbor says it basically killed his 67yo dad. The man went from playing golf every day to being dead in less than 3 years. Sounds like the pain and the meds were more than his body could take and he just gave up and went to meet Jesus.

That is a trip I'd rather put off for a while. The Lord and I ain't exactly on a first name basis, not since I went over to the dark side and married this Buddhist chick ;)

1 posted on 07/01/2013 5:54:42 PM PDT by West Texas Chuck
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To: West Texas Chuck

Anyone who ever had Chickenpox as a child, should get the vaccine - our doc sent me to the local pharmacy - took longer to clear the charges with the insurance company than to get the shot, which was administered by the pharmacist - no side effects - an ounce of prevention.......


75 posted on 07/01/2013 9:15:21 PM PDT by Intolerant in NJ
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To: West Texas Chuck

Nonsense. I had it when I was thirty. The pain was excruciating. It comes from stress. Just take the medication and spend ten days in bed. That will do it. It will come back in a few years, but never so hard.


79 posted on 07/01/2013 10:10:02 PM PDT by kabumpo (Kabumpo)
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To: West Texas Chuck

Apparently there is a vaccine for chicken pox now so the young uns don’t get that disease so no one is immunized against shingles anymore. Therefore it is no longer an old fogey disease but a person phenonemon.
They say it attacks the nerves on one side of your body and in a specific area. I had it on the right upper part of my face from nose to the top of my scalp. I have visible scars. They say if it comes back it will attack the same place as before.
The vaccine is 40% effective.
Lysine by mouth and on the sores is probably best treatment.


81 posted on 07/02/2013 12:27:05 AM PDT by tinamina
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To: West Texas Chuck
This is an important thread and should be taken seriously by everyone. I had either never heard of or previously ignored discussions about shingles until it hit me this last January. At first, I thought I just had a bad tooth ache in my upper right jaw that required attention. I went to the dentist and he said there was nothing wrong with any of my teeth. That is when I started to worry because the right side of my face was now getting very numb and it was tender, sore, and painful. It even occurred to me that I might be having a stroke because of the numbness. I went home and at the evening dinner table the next day my wife asked me what those blisters were that were now forming on my right check under my eye and next to my nose. After discussing the numbness and pain with her and doing a little research on the Internet, we quickly self-diagnosed the problem as shingles. I went to my doctor the next day and he confirmed it was shingles and there was no way of stopping it. It was going to run its course and I would be in for a long haul. He prescribed vicodin for the pain and neurontin to try and calm the traumatized nerves that were now shooting electrical impulses through my right facial nerve. Neither drug helped that much. I had a headache that felt like my head was going to explode. At times I felt like I wanted to curl up in a ball and kiss everything goodbye. It has been 24/7 pain for months. My entire right facial nerve was hit by the virus, from the top of my head, down through the center of my face to my chin. The virus's strategy is to travel down through whichever nerve it targets and seriously damage it all the way to the nerve ends. You can literally see the tracks of the nerve by the line of blisters that erupt on the skin's surface. It is now July and I am still suffering with pain across my cheek and below my eye. I have weird tickling nerve sensations when the wind blows on my cheek, itchiness across my nose and cheek, and constant pain at the outer corner of my eye whenever I blink my eye.

I have studied this illness and have come to these conclusions. Herpes Zoster is the chicken pox virus and once it infects your body it never leaves. After you recover from the pox, the virus retreats into your nerve ganglia and remains there as long as your immune system is able to suppress it. Your immune system keeps it at bay with antibodies built up at the time of the pox infection. However, these antibodies diminish in time and you then become vulnerable to a shingles outbreak, especially if your immune system becomes otherwise compromised by another disease or illness. The recently developed live virus vaccine is meant to trigger or excite your immune system into replacing the depleted antibodies. I have been told that even after a bout with the shingles, you should consider getting the vaccine after a year or after you have recovered from the shingles. The only way to describe the living shingles hell is that the pain is excruciating and the recovery is excruciatingly slow. If you are over 50, please consult with your doctor about getting the vaccine. You should not feel comfortable even if you have never had the chicken pox or if you have been previously vaccinated against the pox. Consult with your doctor. The shingles vaccine is not 100% effective, but anything to improve your odds against getting shingles is worth every penny it costs.

85 posted on 07/02/2013 4:05:07 AM PDT by iontheball
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To: West Texas Chuck
I had it three times in a four month period. I hated the pain medication. It made me sick.

It's been about three years, I think, and I haven't had a problem. I take Vitamin D and L-Lysine daily, and over time the "phantom" pain has decreased to almost nothing.

88 posted on 07/02/2013 8:26:22 AM PDT by trisham (Zen is not easy. It takes effort to attain nothingness. And then what do you have? Bupkis.)
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