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I believe that shingles can cause lower back pain.
I believe that shingles can cause lower back pain. I've recently been diagnosed with shingles, which was preceeeded by lower back pain, heartburn-like pain, and intermittent stabbing pains throughout my chest area and right leg. Then came the snesitive skin issue. My doctor (internal medicine) said that all of these were related, and diagnosed shingles. Started treatment, and have very little blistering because it was caught early.
I believe that shingles can cause lower Back pain. I've recently been diagnosed with shingles, which was preceeeded by lower back pain, heartburn-like pain, and intermittent stabbing pains throughout my chest area and right leg. Then came the snesitive skin issue. My doctor (internal medicine) said that all of these were related, and diagnosed shingles. Started treatment, and have very little blistering because it was caught early.
The possible cause for a hard elongated lump on the lower back rib cage is infection. It can also be caused by shingles.
It could very well be the shingles adult version of chicken pox. You should seek medical advice as soon as you can as the shingles is highly contiguous to others, also it will rule out anything else that it may/not be.
linger means to hang around. like in the song "linger" by the cranberries (amazing song), they say "do you have to let it linger?" meaning, "do you have to let it stay?" if you are lingering, you're staying around, etc. etc. :D
Yes, a kidney infection and pain in the leg are often related. Considering the kidney is located on the lower back region, the pain can often linger through the leg area.
It is possible for the outbreak to occur more than once; but only about 5% will have additional outbreaks.
No. While you can catch chickenpox, shingles comes from a virus already within you (chickenpox virus) so you can only have shingles if you have previously had chickenpox. I myself had shingles back when I was in the fourth grade but neither my brother nor my sister ever had it.
Anywhere! Shingles follow the path of a nerve.
Shingles can cause localized pain in almost any part of the body. Sciatica can cause pain in the lower back and one or both legs.
I'm not to sure but you could replace all the roofing with new shingles dark enough to disguise the staining, or with shingles laced with copper granules, which are lethal to algae. But that would only make sense if the shingles were worn out. To keep the algae from coming back, insert 6-inch-wide strips of zinc or copper under the row of shingling closest to the roof peak, leaving an inch or two of the lower edge exposed to the weather.