Herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia in an elderly patient with critical COVID-19: A case report
Authors: Cao X., Zhang X., Meng W., Zheng H. Published on:
2020
Publication:
Journal of Pain Research DOI:-
Critical patients with COVID-19 are thought to be at high risk of developing chronic pain However, the exact nature and mechanisms of COVID-19-related chronic pain remain largely unknown Here, we describe clinical features, treatments and outcome of herpes zoster as well as postherpetic neuralgia in a 70-year-old woman with critical COVID-19 The patient had a history of type 2 diabetes and myasthenia gravis She developed herpes zoster in the right 10 to 12 lumbar dermatomes in the recovery period of COVID-19 Intravenous (250 mg 3 times a day) and then oral (400 mg 5 times a day) acyclovir was used for antiviral therapy Pregabalin (75 mg orally twice a day) and ibuprofen was used for analgesia Her skin lesions resolved 21 days after the onset of rash However, she continued to have persistent pain in the same dermatomal distribution After the dosage of pregabalin was increased to 150 mg orally twice a day, her pain was partially relieved During the telephone follow-up 4 months after herpes zoster eruption, the patient still complained intermittent pain in the right 10 to 12 lumbar dermatomes Our case draws attention to postherpetic neuralgia in COVID-19 patients and provides a targeted suggestion for this kind of patients
Article Analysis: --
No tags are applied.
No tags found.
Additional Information
Journal:
Journal Article
Source:
WHO: 9drv5m1j
issn_isbn:
-
Country:
-
Language:
-
article_id: 564015
More Info | #564015: Herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia in an elderly patient with critical COVID-19: A case report
View PDF / Links: (#564015Herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia in an elderly patient with critical COVID-19: A case report)