VERY annoying and itching red splodges on your skin that turn into blisters, then sores, then scabs. Some may eventually scar.
Chickenpox bumps can be anywhere from the size of the head of a pine to the size of a dime.
If you had chickenpox, it's possible for your bumps to get a secondary infection. In other words, you could have a bacterial infection of the chickenpox sores.
As chickenpox bumps develop, they start as red bumps and then transform to blisters, sores, and then scabs.
Bumps on hands and feet only is unlikely to be chickenpox. Coxsackievirus is a possibility. See your health care provider for definite diagnosis and treatment.
Chickenpox bumps can be found on any skin or mucous membranes.
Chickenpox causes small bumps that turn into blisters, sores, and crusts.
Chickenpox is no longer contagious after the bumps are scabbed over and dry.
Time :)
You are not likely to get chickenpox if you are immune, but it sometimes happens. When it does, the second case is usually mild with few bumps.
Yes, you can get chickenpox bumps on any skin or mucous membranes, including the ear canal.
Chickenpox causes widespread bumps, not clustered. Shingles or poison ivy are just a couple of problems that can cause a cluster of itchy bumps. See your health care provider for definite diagnosis and treatment.
At various times in the development of chickenpox, the bumps can look red, yellow, or black. Adults will often have a darker color of bumps. A blistering rash is most common in those who have never been vaccinated, but patients who have a case of chickenpox after immunization may not get blisters, but only red marks.