Varicella
Varicella
Varicella
Complications
Acute varicella is generally mild and self-limited, but it may be
associated with complications. Secondary bacterial infections of
Varicella Complications
skin lesions with Staphylococcus or Streptococcus (primarily
●
Bacterial infection of skin
invasive group A) are the most common cause of hospitalization and
lesions
outpatient medical visits and can lead to death. Pneumonia following
varicella is usually viral but may be bacterial. Primary viral ●
Pneumonia
pneumonia is uncommon among immunocompetent children but ●
Central nervous system
is the most common complication in adults. manifestations
Secondary bacterial pneumonia is more common in children ●
Reye syndrome (rare)
younger than age 1 year. Central nervous system manifestations of
varicella range from aseptic meningitis to encephalitis.
Encephalitis is an infrequent complication of varicella (1 per
50,000 cases of varicella in unvaccinated children) and may lead to
seizures and coma. Diffuse cerebral involvement is more
common in adults than in children. Involvement of the
cerebellum, with resulting cerebellar ataxia, is the most
common central nervous system manifestation (1 per 4,000
cases of varicella in unvaccinated children) and generally has a good
outcome. Reye syndrome may follow varicella, although this
outcome has become very rare with the recommendation to not
use aspirin or other salicylates to reduce fever in children with
varicella. Rare complications of varicella include aseptic
meningitis, transverse myelitis, Guillain-Barré syndrome,
thrombocytopenia, hemorrhagic varicella, purpura fulminans,
glomerulonephritis, myocarditis, arthritis, orchitis, uveitis, iritis,
and hepatitis.
The risk of complications from varicella varies with age.
Complications are infrequent among healthy children.
They occur much more frequently in persons older than age 15
years and infants younger than age 1 year. In the prevaccine era,
approximately 10,500 persons with varicella
required hospitalization each year. Hospitalization rates were
approximately 1 to 2 per 1,000 cases among healthy children and 14
per 1,000 cases among adults. The fatality rate for varicella was
approximately 1 per 100,000 cases among children age 1 through 14
years, 6 per 100,000 cases among persons
age 15 through 19 years, and 21 per 100,000 cases among adults.
Most deaths occur in immunocompetent children and adults. Since
1995, when the varicella vaccination program was implemented,
hospitalizations and deaths from varicella have declined in the
United States 93% and 94%, respectivel