Medical Expert explains how Chickenpox can infect adults

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adults

Chicken Pox

A Public Health Physician, Dr Chioma Nwakanma, says chickenpox disease can only infect adults with weak immune system.

Nwakanma, also the Executive Director, Smile With Me Foundation (SWMF), made this known in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Tuesday in Awka.

According to her, the believe that chickenpox must infect an individual at one point in life is not true, because it is reliant on the immune system.

She explained that chickenpox was an airborne infectious disease caused by the varicella zoster virus (VZV), a virus that results in a blister-like rash, itching, tiredness and fever.

adults
Chicken pox

The expert said blisters could spread over the entire body, causing between 250 and 500 itchy blisters, adding that it could appear in three or more successive waves before it eventually dry up.

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“Chickenpox is common among children, but when an adult is infected, it is generally fatal and severe due to weak immune system.

“It is a myth to say that Chickenpox

must infect an individual at one point in life. Like every infection, it infects anyone exposed to risk factors of transmission.

“It must not affect every individual. Anyone with a strong immunity, who stays away from the infection modes of transmission is safe.

“The only thing to note is that it is viral and a one-time infection gives you immunity to it for life in most cases.

“It can only come back, if it was poorly treated and the person goes into a low immunity state such as malnutrition, pregnancy, antibiotic abuse.

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“In low body immunity states, it can come back as what we call ‘Shingles’,” she said.

Nwakanma also warned that chickenpox could spread easily to others through coughing or sneezing of ill individual or through direct contact with secretions from the rash.

She highlighted the various ways chickenpox could be prevented and treated.

“At the hospital some drugs could be prescribed to help control the severe itching and may be helpful at night to help the patient sleep well.

“Scratching increases the risk of secondary infections. All patients with chicken pox should have their nails trimmed short to reduce scratching,” Nwakanma said.

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The physician said that there was no actual cure for chickenpox, but there was a vaccine called Varicella treatment, mainly for easing or relieving the symptoms while the immune system clears the virus from the body.

“As a protective measure, patients are usually required to stay at home while they are infectious to avoid spreading the disease to others,“ she said.

(NAN)

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