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Chickenpox

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Chickenpox
SpecialtyInfectious diseases, pediatrics Edit this on Wikidata

For the episode of South Park by that name, see Chickenpox.

Chickenpox, also spelled chicken pox, is the commonly known name for varicella disease, frequently contracted in childhood.

Chickenpox is caused by the varicella-zoster virus (VZV), also known as human herpes virus 3 (HHV-3), one of the eight herpes viruses known to affect humans. It is characterized by a fever, followed by itchy raw pox or open sores.

Effects

Andrew Schlafly, general counsel of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons (AAPS), in his testimony against a proposed New Jersey rule mandating chickenpox vaccination, made the following comments on the history of chickenpox:

Prior to the development of the varicella (chickenpox) vaccine, the disease was widely recognized to be one of the most benign illnesses. The Encyclopedia of Medicine of the American Medical Association stated in 1989 that chickenpox is a "common and mild infectious disease of childhood" and that "all healthy children should be exposed to chickenpox … at an age at which it is no more than an inconvenience." Likewise, the American Academy of Pediatrics declared in a 1996 brochure that '[m]ost children who are otherwise healthy and get chickenpox won't have any complications from the disease.

Schlafly's essay also stated, "The risk of contracting and dying from chickenpox was little more than the risk of being struck and killed by lightning (about 89 cases per year in the U.S)." (This figure reflected a population of 295,734,134 in 2005, according to the United States Census Bureau.) "Chickenpox mortality," continued Schlafly, "was among the lowest of all known diseases."

A patient with chickenpox on day 5.

The disease is rarely fatal: if it does cause death, it is usually from varicella pneumonia, which occurs more frequently in pregnant women. In the US, 55 percent of chickenpox deaths were in the over-20 age group. Chickenpox has a two-week incubation period and is highly contagious by air transmission two days before symptoms appear. Therefore chickenpox spreads quickly through schools and other places of close contact. Once someone has been infected with the disease, they usually develop an immunity and cannot get it again. As the disease is more severe if contracted by an adult, parents have been known to ensure that their children became infected before adulthood. Aspirin shouldn't be used during a chickenpox infection because it can increase the incidence of a potentially deadly condition called Reye's syndrome.

Doctors advise that pregnant women who come into contact with chickenpox should contact their doctor immediately as the virus can cause serious problems for the fetus.

Later in life, virus remaining in the nerves can develop into the painful disease, shingles, particularly in people with compromised immune systems, such as the elderly, and perhaps even sunburn. A chickenpox vaccine has been available since 1995, and is now required in some countries for children to be admitted into elementary school. In addition, effective medications (e.g., acyclovir) are available to treat chickenpox in healthy and immunocompromised persons.

History

One history of medicine book claims that Giovanni Filippo (1510–1580) of Palermo gave the first description of varicella (chickenpox). Subsequently in the 1600s, an English physician named Richard Morton described what he thought was a mild form of smallpox as "chicken pox." Later, in 1767, a physician named William Heberden, also from England, was the first physician to clearly demonstrate that chickenpox was different from smallpox. However, it is believed that the name chickenpox was commonly used in earlier centuries before doctors identified the disease.

There are many explanations offered for the origin of the name chickenpox, from the idea that the specks that appeared looked as though the skin was picked by chickens to that the disease was named after chick peas, from a supposed resemblance of the seed to the lesions. The simplest explanation is probably that offered by Samuel Johnson, that the disease was "no very great danger" thus a "chicken" version of the pox. As "pox" also means curse, in medieval times some believed it was a plague brought on to curse children by the use of black magic. Incidentally, during the medieval era, oatmeal was discovered to soothe the sores, and oatmeal baths are today still commonly given to relieve itching.

References


See also