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Herpes Zoster

Vaccines for Older Adults

Vaccines for Older Adults

Teaser: 


Mazen S. Bader, MD, FRCPC, MPH, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, Memorial University of Newfoundland and Labrador, St. John’s, NL.
Daniel Hinthorn, MD, FACP, Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, University of Kansas Medical Center, Kansas City, KS, USA.

Preventive health interventions are key to maintaining the health and good function of older adults. Despite being safe and a highly effective method of preventing certain infectious diseases, vaccination rates among older adults continue to lag behind national goals. Vaccines for older adults can be divided into three categories: those that are required for all older adults, those that may be required for special circumstances, and those that are required for travel. Physicians should be familiar with the indications, contraindications, and adverse effects of commonly used vaccines among older adults. This article will focus only on the vaccines required for all older adults.
Key words: vaccines, older adults, influenza, pneumococcal vaccine, herpes zoster, tetanus.

Why Shingles Occurs Mostly in Seniors

Why Shingles Occurs Mostly in Seniors

Teaser: 


Gradual Immunologic Decline Explains Frequency of Herpes Zoster Among the Elderly

John M Conly, MD,CCFP, FRCPC, FACP
Consultant, Infectious Diseases
Director, Infection Prevention and Control
University Health Network (Toronto General,
Toronto Western and Princess Margaret Hospitals)
Professor of Medicine, University of Toronto

Introduction
Although it is now understood that varicella-zoster virus (VZV) is the etiologic agent for both varicella and herpes zoster, it is of historical interest to note that in the early medical literature, the clinical illnesses of varicella and herpes zoster were considered separate entities. Just six decades ago it was still taught at Harvard University that these viruses were unrelated.1 In 1943, a pediatrician named Garland suggested that zoster may be due to the reactivation of a latent varicella virus,2 but it was not until 1958 that VZV was definitively recognized as the etiologic agent for both varicella and zoster.3,4 The VZ virus is a DNA virus and is a member of the Herpesviridae family bearing many distinct similarities to other members of this group of viruses. The virus is spread by direct contact, by droplet and airborne routes from vesicular fluid of skin lesions, or from secretions from the respiratory tract.5 Transplacental transmission has also been documented.