TITLE:
Atypical Localization of Zona in a Four-and-a-Half-Year-Old Previously Vaccinated Boy. Is it a Vaccine Complication?
AUTHORS:
Abdullah Murat Tuncer, Orhan Pekuz, Bilgen Gencler, Meva Pekuz
KEYWORDS:
Zona Zoster Infection, Pediatric Zona, Varicella Vaccination, V-Z Infection after Vaccination, Infection with Vaccine Strain
JOURNAL NAME:
Case Reports in Clinical Medicine,
Vol.14 No.8,
August
4,
2025
ABSTRACT: A literature review was conducted on the shingles infection that developed on the left arm of a 4-and-a-half-year-old boy who had been vaccinated against chickenpox at the age of one, and it was discussed as a potential complication of the live vaccine or an alternative explanation. The localization of shingles in our patient, along with its limited dermatomal distribution related to the area where the varicella vaccine was administered, suggests that it may be due to the vaccine virus. Our patient recovered rapidly with the use of antiviral agents. Because shingles, a disease typically seen in adults, is rare in children, and because there are very few cases in the literature that can progress and lead to fatal outcomes, this case is brought to the attention of pediatricians, dermatologists, and family physicians. The fact that the live varicella vaccine is administered uniformly worldwide may provide insight into whether future cases of shingles are related to the vaccine, and suggestions were made in the article.