New burning, one-sided band of pain on the chest or back that nothing mechanical sets off, especially over 50? See a doctor today — antiviral tablets work best in the first 2-3 days.
The honest headline: the strongest evidence here is about preventing shingles and treating it early, not curing the nerve pain once it sets in. The active treatments are prescribed by a doctor — physical therapy's job is recognizing it and getting you to that doctor fast.
Tier 1 — Strongest Evidence
Prevention is the highest-value move in the whole condition. The vaccine substantially cuts both shingles and the lingering nerve pain in older adults. Ask your GP or pharmacy if you're eligible (typically 50+ or immune-compromised).
Started early, antivirals shorten the rash and reduce the acute pain. Their effect on preventing long-term nerve pain is weaker than commonly claimed, but earlier is still better. This is a same-day doctor visit, not a wait-and-see.
There is no proven exercise program that treats shingles or its nerve pain — be wary of anyone selling one. What's reasonable and low-risk, once the acute pain settles, is gentle supportive work:
Gentle trunk & rib mobility: easy side bends, rotations, and full normal breathing to undo the guarding that builds up around painful ribs. A few minutes, often, within comfort.
Skin desensitization: once the rash has healed, gradually getting the over-sensitive skin used to light touch again (soft cloth, then normal clothing) can help calm the alarm. Slow and gentle.
Paced activity: little and often beats boom-and-bust — nerve pain flares when you overdo it.
This is an illness, not an injury — rest from hard training through the acute, painful, rashy phase and prioritize getting treated. Ease back as the pain settles, using these checks:
Refer to: GP/physician (antivirals), ophthalmology or A&E (eye involvement), A&E (any suspected heart/lung emergency).
New burning, one-sided band of pain across your chest or back that nothing mechanical seems to set off — especially if you're over 50? See a doctor today.
Antiviral tablets work best when started within the first 2–3 days. Don't wait for a rash, and don't write it off as a strained muscle or rib.
Takes one phone call. The clock matters more than the diagnosis.
The recognition and referral message, vaccination, and early antiviral for acute pain are all HIGH confidence. The drugs for established nerve pain help only modestly (MODERATE). Interventional procedures for stubborn cases are LOW–MODERATE. And a physical-therapy-specific protocol for this condition simply has no evidence behind it.
A modern, well-run trial showing early antivirals robustly reduce long-term nerve pain (not just acute pain) would upgrade that claim from MODERATE to HIGH and settle a real conflict — the Cochrane review didn't find a significant effect, while large cohort data favor treating earlier.
A proper trial of a defined physical-therapy program (graded skin desensitization plus paced trunk and breathing work) against usual care, in people with established chest-wall nerve pain, would move physiotherapy from "no evidence" to a real grade.
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