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Adults with Shingles Have a 30 Percent or More Increased Stroke Risk

Shingles The results of a study report that adults with shingles were about 30 percent more likely to have a stroke during a one-year follow-up than adults without shingles, and the risk was even greater when the infection involved the eyes.

Shingles (herpes zoster) is a painful skin rash caused by the varicella zoster virus (VZV), which is the same virus that causes chickenpox. After recovery from chickenpox, the virus stays in the body and usually doesn't cause problems, but can reappear years later, causing shingles.

Image: Different stages of shingles.

"Many studies have shown that people with herpes zoster infection are more likely to develop stroke. But ours is the first to demonstrate the actual risk of stroke following herpes zoster infection," said Jiunn-Horng Kang, lead author of the study.

"While the mechanism by which shingles increases stroke risk remains unclear, the possibility of developing a stroke after a shingles attack should not be overlooked. Doctors and patients must pay extra attention to controlling other risk factors for stroke, such as high blood pressure, smoking and diabetes." Said Kang

Previous research suggests that as the herpes zoster virus replicates and attacks the vessel wall, the vessel wall becomes damaged and inflamed. This in turn can cause the vessel to close up, or occlude, blocking blood flow to the brain. Shingles is also the only recognized human virus able to invade cerebral arteries. In addition, shingles is also associated with severe pain, and the stress of that chronic pain may theoretically raise the risk of cardiovascular disease.

In this study, the researchers studied 7,760 patients 18 years and older who received shingles treatment between 1997 and 2001. These people were matched by age and gender with 23,280 adults who weren't treated for shingles (controls). Their average age was 47.

During the one-year follow-up, 133 shingles patients (about 1.7 percent) and 306 of the controls (about 1.3 percent) had strokes. After adjusting for general factors for stroke risk, the researchers found:
  • People treated for a shingles infection were 31 percent more likely to have a stroke, compared with patients without a shingles infection.
  • Patients with shingles infections that involved the skin around the eye and the eye itself (herpes zoster ophthalmicus) were 4.28 times more likely to have a stroke than patients without shingles.

When the researchers analyzed the risk of stroke by stroke type, they found:
  • Shingles patients were 31 percent more likely to develop an ischemic stroke during the one-year follow-up than those without shingles.
  • The risk of hemorrhagic (bleeding) stroke was 2.79 times higher for people with shingles infection than for people without shingles.
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References:
1. Jiunn-Horng Kang, et al. Increased Risk of Stroke After a Herpes Zoster Attack. A Population-Based Follow-Up Study. Stroke, Oct 2009; doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.109.562017.

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