Shingles-like appearance

Herpes zoster-like appearance is mainly characterized by clusters of blisters, clustered along a peripheral nerve on one side, with obvious neuralgia. The initial infection is chickenpox. Later, the virus can lurk in the posterior root ganglia of the spinal cord for a long time. The weakened immune function can induce the chickenpox zoster virus to reactivate, grow and reproduce, and spread to the skin along the peripheral nerves, causing shingles. People with shingles are generally immune to the virus for life. However, there have been repeated authors.

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