Shingles pain how long does it last

For Some, Pain from Shingles May Linger and Become Long-term Condition

November 25, 2011

Dear Mayo Clinic:

I have been diagnosed with shingles of the trigeminal nerve affecting my face. How do I reduce the pain in my head and eye after having shingles?

Answer:
For most people, the pain from a case of shingles usually fades as the rash disappears. But for some, the pain may linger and become a long-term condition. A variety of treatments may lessen this pain, but the condition can be challenging to treat.

Shingles is a localized form of chickenpox. Once you've had chickenpox, the varicella-zoster virus that caused it remains in your body for the rest of your life. As you grow older, the virus can reactivate. Sometimes this occurs when your body is stressed — because of another infection or due to medications that suppress your immune system, for example. The result is shingles. Because you have some immunity against the virus, rather than getting a full body rash, the rash occurs in areas of skin supplied by the nerve where the virus is reactivated.

Shingles typically involves a bandlike rash on the chest, abdomen or face that is usually quite painful. Most people recover from shingles in a few weeks without other problems, but a small number continue to have severe pain in the same distribution that was irritated when the virus returned. Pain that lasts for three months or more is called postherpetic neuralgia.

The risk of developing postherpetic neuralgia increases with age. The condition is much more common in people 60 and older than in younger people with shingles. The area affected also makes a difference. When shingles occurs on the face, as in your case, the likelihood of postherpetic neuralgia is significantly higher than for other parts of the body.

The first-line treatment for postherpetic neuralgia is usually a prescription skin patch containing the pain-reliever lidocaine. Depending on the situation, a lidocaine cream in combination with other substances, such as aspirin, may be helpful. A new patch approved earlier this year by the Food and Drug Administration that contains the medication capsaicin has also been shown to help reduce postherpetic neuralgia. Lidocaine can be used on the forehead but not in the eye, and capsaicin isn't recommended for use on the face. So, other options will be necessary for your situation.

When lidocaine patches or creams aren't effective or cannot be used, the next step is an oral medication. Several classes of drugs have been shown to be helpful. The first includes anti-seizure medications, such as gabapentin and pregabalin. These medications stabilize abnormal electrical activity in your nervous system caused by injured nerves and interrupt the pain process.

The second class of drugs that can decrease postherpetic neuralgia are antidepressants, such as nortriptyline, amitriptyline, and duloxetine. They block absorption of the neurotransmitters norepinephrine and serotonin into nerve cells, making more of these chemicals available in the brain, which lessens pain.

Finally, pain relievers — ranging from over-the-counter medications such as acetaminophen or ibuprofen to prescription drugs such as opioid analgesics — also are often used to treat postherpetic neuralgia.

If medications aren't enough, procedures such as nerve blocks or steroid injections may help lessen postherpetic neuralgia.

A vaccine to protect against shingles is available. Although it doesn't completely prevent shingles, the vaccine decreases by 50 percent a person's risk of developing the condition. For those who get shingles after receiving the vaccine, their risk of developing postherpetic neuralgia is reduced by two-thirds. Whether they have had shingles or not, the vaccine is recommended for adults age 60 and older.

If pain lasts longer than three months after a case of shingles, talk to your primary care doctor, who can work with you to manage the pain with first-line treatments. If patches, creams or medication don't help, a referral to a pain specialist would be a reasonable next step.

— James Watson, M.D., Neurology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Overview

Postherpetic neuralgia (post-hur-PET-ik noo-RAL-juh) is the most common complication of shingles. The condition affects nerve fibers and skin, causing burning pain that lasts long after the rash and blisters of shingles disappear.

The chickenpox (herpes zoster) virus causes shingles. The risk of postherpetic neuralgia increases with age, primarily affecting people older than 60. There's no cure, but treatments can ease symptoms. For most people, postherpetic neuralgia improves over time.

Symptoms

The signs and symptoms of postherpetic neuralgia are generally limited to the area of your skin where the shingles outbreak first occurred — most commonly in a band around your trunk, usually on one side of your body.

Signs and symptoms might include:

  • Pain that lasts three months or longer after the shingles rash has healed. The associated pain has been described as burning, sharp and jabbing, or deep and aching.
  • Sensitivity to light touch. People with the condition often can't bear even the touch of clothing on the affected skin (allodynia).
  • Itching and numbness. Less commonly, postherpetic neuralgia can produce an itchy feeling or numbness.

When to see a doctor

See a doctor at the first sign of shingles. Often the pain starts before you notice a rash. Your risk of developing postherpetic neuralgia is lessened if you begin taking antiviral medications within 72 hours of developing the shingles rash.

Causes

Once you've had chickenpox, the virus remains in your body for the rest of your life. As you age or if your immune system is suppressed, such as from medications or chemotherapy, the virus can reactivate, causing shingles.

Postherpetic neuralgia occurs if your nerve fibers are damaged during an outbreak of shingles. Damaged fibers can't send messages from your skin to your brain as they normally do. Instead, the messages become confused and exaggerated, causing chronic, often excruciating pain that can last months — or even years.

Risk factors

When you have shingles, you might be at greater risk of developing postherpetic neuralgia as a result of:

  • Age. You're older than 50.
  • Severity of shingles. You had a severe rash and severe pain.
  • Other illness. You have a chronic disease, such as diabetes.
  • Shingles location. You had shingles on your face or torso.
  • Your shingles antiviral treatment was delayed for more than 72 hours after your rash appeared.

Complications

Depending on how long postherpetic neuralgia lasts and how painful it is, people with the condition can develop other symptoms that are common with chronic pain such as:

  • Depression
  • Fatigue
  • Difficulty sleeping
  • Lack of appetite
  • Difficulty concentrating

Prevention

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that adults 50 and older get a Shingrix vaccine to prevent shingles, even if they've had shingles or the older vaccine Zostavax. Shingrix is given in two doses, two to six months apart.

The CDC says two doses of Shingrix is more than 90 percent effective in preventing shingles and postherpetic neuralgia. Shingrix is preferred over Zostavax. The effectiveness may be sustained for a longer period of time than Zostavax. Zostavax may still be used sometimes for healthy adults age 60 and older who aren't allergic to Zostavax and who don't take immune-suppressing medications.

Nov. 06, 2020

How long does shingles nerve pain last?

Signs and symptoms might include: Pain that lasts three months or longer after the shingles rash has healed. The associated pain has been described as burning, sharp and jabbing, or deep and aching.

Why does shingles pain last so long?

When this happens, feelings of pain remain long after the blisters have cleared up. It's caused by nerve injury at the rash site. PHN can be difficult to treat, and the pain can last for months or years. About 13 percent of people over 60 who experience shingles go on to develop PHN.

What helps shingles pain go away?

Not everyone has the same amount of pain from shingles. Over-the-counter pain medicine like acetaminophen (one brand name: Tylenol) and ibuprofen (one brand name: Motrin) can help ease the pain. A liquid medicine that you put on your skin (brand name: Domeboro) can help cool the rash and stop the itching.