Cancer patients face higher risk of painful skin condition
Patients
suffering from cancer
and those treated with chemotherapy may be at 40 per cent increased
risk of developing shingles, compared with those not having cancer,
finds a new study.
Shingles
(herpes zoster) -- marked by painful rashes and skin
blisters -- is
caused by the varicella zoster virus that causes chickenpox.
The
virus remains dormant in the body but causes shingles if it
reactivates later in life.
The
study showed that patients with a blood-related cancer had the
greatest shingles risk of more than three times compared to people
without cancer, the Health Day reported.
The
higher risk among blood cancer patients was present two years before
their cancer diagnosis.
In
addition, those with a solid tumour including cancer in the lung,
breast, prostate or other organs had a 30 per cent higher risk of
shingles than people without cancer, lead researcher Jiahui Qian from
the University of New South Wales in Australia was quoted as saying.
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