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Symptoms of Chickenpox En Español (Spanish Version)
Symptoms usually occur 10-21 days after contact with the chickenpox virus. Initial symptoms include:
- Headache
- Fever
- General feeling of malaise
- Loss of appetite
Within 1-2 days after the initial symptoms, a rash develops.
Characteristics of the rash include:
- At first, the rash consists of small, flat, red spots.
- The spots become raised and form clusters of round, itchy, fluid-filled blisters on a red base.
- The blisters develop in clusters, with new clusters forming over 5-6 days.
- Once the rash develops, there is usually a variety of spots visible: flat red areas, blisters with clear fluid, blisters with cloudy fluid, and open blisters. This variety helps doctors to be confident that the rash is due to chickenpox.
- The rash usually develops on the skin above the waist, including the scalp.
Exposed areas are often most significantly affected.
- The rash may sometimes appear on the inside of the eyelids, in the mouth, nose, throat, upper airway, voice box, rectum, or vagina.
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In healthy children, the rash usually crusts over by day 6-7. The crusts are gone within three weeks, usually without scarring.
Note:
Adults or patients who are immunocompromised may have more severe cases that last longer.
The Merck Manual of Medical Information.
17th ed. Simon and Schuster, Inc.; 2000.
National Centers for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. Available at:
http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod
.
National Immunization Program. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention website. Available at:
http://www.cdc.gov/nip/default.htm
.
Last Reviewed October 2012
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