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The Watercooler
Medical question for those in the know
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<blockquote data-quote="GoingNorth" data-source="post: 320405" data-attributes="member: 1963"><p>It is also possible for a secondary bacterial infection to take hold in areas affected by yeast.</p><p></p><p>I'd say that husband should see a doctor.</p><p></p><p>yeast usually itches like crazy. Shingles form blisters,not hives, and it is quite possible for them to occur only on one side. Shingles pop up along the tracks of spinal or cranial nerves.</p><p></p><p>Normally the virus(same as what causes chicken pox) lays dormant at the nerve roots and then spread and crop up under any type of stress--physical or otherwise.</p><p></p><p>Shingles itch and burn terribly, and can damage the nerves in such a way that permanent pain can remain long after the blisters have cleared up.\</p><p></p><p>My big reason for advising that husband see his doctor is that there are a couple of very nasty bacterial infections that require very aggressive treatment. They are very rare, but it still needs to be ruled out.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GoingNorth, post: 320405, member: 1963"] It is also possible for a secondary bacterial infection to take hold in areas affected by yeast. I'd say that husband should see a doctor. yeast usually itches like crazy. Shingles form blisters,not hives, and it is quite possible for them to occur only on one side. Shingles pop up along the tracks of spinal or cranial nerves. Normally the virus(same as what causes chicken pox) lays dormant at the nerve roots and then spread and crop up under any type of stress--physical or otherwise. Shingles itch and burn terribly, and can damage the nerves in such a way that permanent pain can remain long after the blisters have cleared up.\ My big reason for advising that husband see his doctor is that there are a couple of very nasty bacterial infections that require very aggressive treatment. They are very rare, but it still needs to be ruled out. [/QUOTE]
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Medical question for those in the know
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