Shingles Vaccinations Adrian MI

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Shingles Vaccinations. You will find informative articles about Shingles Vaccinations, including "Should You Get the Shingles Vaccine?". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Adrian, MI that can help answer your questions about Shingles Vaccinations.

Constantine Gus Dumas, MD
616-786-3233
1042 Sutton Rd Unit 3
Adrian, MI
Michael D Jones, MD
517-266-1042
1548 W Maumee St Ste C
Adrian, MI
Eleanor M Parshall, MD
517-467-8126
Onsted, MI
Richard Nash Wilcox, MD
1900 Wealthy St SE
Grand Rapids, MI
George E McCarty, MD
304-424-2667
3601 W 13 Mile Rd
Royal Oak, MI
Richard Holt Gascoigne, MD
517-263-6105
672 Stonecrest
Adrian, MI
Laurie L Barkway, DO
502 E Cummins St
Tecumseh, MI
Norman H Teer, DO
734-425-0500
9460 Middlebelt Rd
Livonia, MI
Alfred Franzblau, MD
734-936-5580
1801 Greenview Dr
Ann Arbor, MI
Kevin Kenneth Florek, DO
Crittenton Hosp-Occmed 1101 West Univ Drive
Rochester, MI
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Should You Get the Shingles Vaccine?

Remember that bout with chicken pox you had as a kid? You probably spent a good deal of time soaking in a baking-soda bath and trying not to scratch those itchy lesions. Fortunately, the infection cleared up with no long-lasting effects, right? Wrong! If you've ever had chicken pox, you're at risk of getting a related disease called shingles as you get older. And shingles might be even more painful than chicken pox is itchy.

After you have the chicken pox, the virus quiets down but doesn't actually disappear. It stays dormant in the roots of your spinal cord for decades. If you get sick or come under stress in your later years, the virus can flare up suddenly and intensely in the form of shingles also known as herpes zoster. It can cause serious pain and permanent nerve damage and is particularly destructive to people who are 80 or older.

Shingles normally presents with severe pain, tingling, or burning on one side of the body. That's followed by red, scaly blisters that break, dry, and crust over. While these blisters commonly occur from the spine all the way around to the stomach or chest, they can also show up on the face. In addition, you may have fever, stomach pain, headache, joint pain, and problems with your vision or your taste buds. The disease usually clears within a matter of weeks if treated with an antiviral medication. However, the discomfort of the illness and possible complications mean it's best to avoid getting it in the first place.

The good news? The shingles vaccine is very effective at eradicating your shingles risk. A study of more than 300,000 older people showed that vaccinations reduced the incidence of the disease by 55 percent. The vaccine is particularly useful in preventing a complication called ophthalmic shingles, which can damage eyes and even cause blindness.  

The bad news? It's very hard to get the vaccine. Although 500,000 older people in this country get shingles every year, only 10 percent get vaccinated aga...

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