Main content Complications of Chickenpox

    Complications of Chickenpox



    Skin infection is the most common complication of Reference chickenpox Opens New Window. Skin infections occur when bacteria from your skin or under your fingernails get into a chickenpox blister. Sometimes a skin infection from chickenpox can be serious.

    Other complications of chickenpox are rare. They include:

    • Varicella pneumonia. Reference Pneumonia Opens New Window can develop if the chickenpox virus travels to your lungs. Pneumonia from chickenpox is most common in teens, adults, and pregnant women who have chickenpox in the last part of pregnancy. It is also more likely to develop in people who smoke cigarettes, have lifelong (chronic) lung diseases, or have Reference impaired immune systems Opens New Window.
    • Inflammation (swelling) of the brain, known as Reference encephalitis Opens New Window. Encephalitis can develop about 5 to 10 days after the chickenpox rash appears. In children, encephalitis most often affects a specific part of the brain (cerebellum) and is called acute cerebellar Reference ataxia Opens New Window. It mainly causes poor muscle coordination, although other symptoms of encephalitis can also occur. In adults, this complication is more likely to affect a bigger part of the brain and cause more severe symptoms. Encephalitis symptoms include confusion, a high fever, a severe headache, sleepiness, sensitivity to light, and nausea. In the most serious cases, a person may have seizures or tremors. Treatment may include medicine to help relieve symptoms. Some people who have encephalitis may need to stay in the hospital.
    • Vision loss. Chickenpox virus that spreads into the clear eye covering (cornea) can leave scars that can cause vision loss.
    • Reference Reye syndrome Opens New Window. Reye syndrome can develop in young people who take aspirin during chickenpox or flu treatment. It can be prevented by not giving aspirin to anyone under the age of 20.
    • Inflammation of the joints (Reference arthritis Opens New Window). Sometimes people with chickenpox have pain in their muscles and joints. This pain usually lasts as long as the chickenpox rash. Medicines taken for fever or other general illness often help ease the pain.

    The following complications of chickenpox are very rare:

    • Inflammation of the nerves of the eye (optic neuritis) or the spinal cord.
    • Inflammation of the tissues surrounding the brain and spinal cord (Reference meningitis Opens New Window).
    • Nerve damage that causes problems with movement of the face or other parts of the body.
    • Certain blood disorders, such as a decrease in the number of blood cells that help clot blood (thrombocytopenia).
    • Death.

    Women who are pregnant when they have chickenpox are at risk for complications such as premature labor or varicella pneumonia, and the fetus is at risk of developing chickenpox. Fetuses with chickenpox are more likely to develop birth defects or other complications before and after birth. Newborn babies can also get chickenpox when their mother has the illness within a few days of delivery.

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