Is Shingles Contagious?
Varicella zoster virus is a viral outbreak that has "stages" of contagious periods.
To be more specific, Varicella (Chickenpox) and Zoster (shingles) are the two different manifestations of the Varicella-Zoster virus.
Varicella
Varicella/chicken pox is a primary infection with Varicella zoster virus. It occurs mainly in children and is characterized by generalized itchy, vesicular eruptions/rash and fever. Following the initial acute infection, the virus becomes latent in our sensory nerves.
Zoster
Zoster/Shingles is due to a reactivation of the latent/dormant Varicella (Chickenpox) virus and affects mainly adults. The risk of acquiring zoster infection increases with age (50+), spinal traumas, exposure to irradiation, HIV infection, corticosteroid therapy and cancer. It is characterized by a painful eruption of blistering lesions along with inflammation in the skin area supplied by the sensory nerve bundle associated with the location of the expressed rash.
The Varicella (Chickenpox) zoster virus is highly contagious.
Because the main route of Chicken pox transmission occurs when protected Varicella zoster particles carry through the air, spreading of the virus can occur through the skin blistering of the infected person to the respiratory tract of the susceptible person as well as through direct contact with the infectious fluid in the blister of the infected person.
The Zoster (Shingles) virus is less communicable than varicella.
Shingles presents itself as a one-sided, blistering rash; transmission occurs through direct contact with the infected fluid in the blisters of the infected person. It is important to note that a person with Shingles does not transmit "Shingles" to another, but will transmit the Varicella zoster virus to another - which may or may not present as Chickenpox or Shingles at some point in the newly infected person's life.
A person with active shingles can spread the virus when the rash is in the blister-phase. A person is not infectious before the blisters appear. Once the rash has developed crusts, the person is no longer contagious. - CDC.
If you have Shingles or are caring for someone with Shingles
Keep the rash covered at all times. Wash the bed sheets and clothing regularly and separate from the family's clothing. If applying symptom relieving ointments, glove up! (you can also reach for a handy garbage bag, ziploc bag or saran wrap to act as a barrier); Avoid touching or scratching the rash; change clothes often and wash immediately; Wash your hands often; Until your rash has developed crusts, please responsibly avoid pregnant women, babies and people with weakened immune systems (patients undergoing chemotherapy or receiving immunosuppressive medications such as steroids, organ transplant recipients and people with HIV).
Natural Shingles Remedies
Because the Zoster virus is an opportunistic virus that rears its ugly head during times of duress or physical stress (like heavy sun exposure and varying heat climates), the best remedy is to rest and remove yourself from the environment causing your immune system to react in such a manner. Once you have been able to do that, the following are recommended for symptom relief and reduction of outbreak time.
ACUPUNCTURE
As an Acupuncturist who has, on numerous occasions, surrounded this dragon with needles and watched with my own eyes the quick recession of a Shingles rash, I immediately say "get to your local acupuncturist", or ask them to come to you.
EPSOM SALT POULTICE
This old Appalachian recipe was handed to me by a fellow herbalist. Grab a bag of Epsom salts and cheesecloth (or cut up an old t-shirt). Pour a large handful of the Epsom salts into the (roughly 8" x 8" or washcloth size) cheesecloth and close with a rubber band (or whatever you have). If you are able to crush the salts with a hammer or spoon, do so. Make about 10 or 20 of these little poultices. Submerge (briefly) the poultice into water and place DIRECTLY ON the painful, inflamed and blistering areas of the outbreak. Remove the poultice once you feel it getting hot and replace with a new poultice until it gets hot. Repeat this process until you pull out the inflammation and pain has reduced.
CHINESE HERBS
Ancient Chinese herbal formulas are brilliant for dismantling viral skin outbreaks. The Viraease Skin Salve made by The Alchemist Collection will work quickly to relieve the symptoms (blisters, pain, itch, redness, swelling) associated with a Shingles outbreak as well as Chickenpox outbreaks. It is safe for children and adults.
Author: Candice Nelms, Dipl. OM. Candice is an Oriental Medical Physician from Key Largo, FL and an FDA-registered manufacturer of all-natural products informed by Chinese Medicine and ancient formulations. (https://www.thealchemistcollection.com)
I frankly don't think shingles is contagious, I got it when my kids were small and they got chicken pox, it hit me in my back and part of my arm, very painful and in fact my back is still kind of numb where I got it. The doctor told me I should rest but at that time we were heavily dependent on very few people at work, so my boss told me if I could man it out and work. Well I did, and actually nobody I was near with developed shingles, and the only people I know who have had shingles got it because of contact with children with chicken pox, apparently this happens when your defenses are not to strong because you got chicken pox when you were a child and it didn't hit hard enough for the body to acquire defenses. At least that is what I have been led to believe through experience.
Hi, and thank you for your comment - to be more specifice The (shingles) virus is spread through direct contact with fluid from the rash blisters caused by shingles. A person with active shingles can spread the virus when the rash is in the blister-phase. A person is not infectious before the blisters appear. Once the rash has developed crusts, the person is no longer contagious. The Chicken pox virus is contagious via the air, so much easier to spread and catch.
I understand, but I was at work every day when I had shingles, through every stage had contact with a lot of people and nobody got it, that's why I don't believe it's contagious.
Excellent post @candicenelms, the information you just shared is very interesting, really did not know that the shingles were contagious, wise chickenpox, but the zoster totally ignored, it is always good to learn something new. Thank you very much for all this information
I am glad you found it helpful, I will continue to blog based on my clinical practice and informative experiences.