This image displays red bumps with a depression in the center typical of varicella (chickenpox). This image displays chickenpox on the soft palate of the mouth. This image displays a liquid-filled chickenpox blister on a red base. The blisters (vesicles) of chickenpox (varicella) can be widely scattered, as seen in this child. Chickenpox can cause small sores inside the mouth as well as numerous blisters and scabs on the skin. The blisters of varicella (chickenpox) are usually small and filled with a clear fluid. This image displays chickenpox (varicella) blisters, which are often described as "dew drops on a rose petal" due to their clear drops on a pink base. This image displays a child with chickenpox (varicella) with different stages of lesions, including intact blisters and some that have dried into scabs. This image displays a close-up of a small varicella (chickenpox) blister. In this chickenpox (varicella) image, there are three small blisters in and around the armpit. Chickenpox (varicella) typically has numerous scattered blisters (vesicles) surrounded by a pink area of skin.
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Chickenpox (Varicella)  A parent's guide to condition and treatment information

Picture of Chickenpox (Varicella): This image displays red bumps with a depression in the center typical of varicella (chickenpox). Divider line
This image displays red bumps with a depression in the center typical of varicella (chickenpox).
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Signs and Symptoms
Most children act sick with fever and vague symptoms (loss of appetite, headache, belly ache) for 1–2 days before they start to break out with a rash. These symptoms last for 2–4 days after the rash appears.

An early pink-to-red, flat, small spot rapidly becomes bumpy and then blisters with a surrounding halo of redness. The spots usually appear first on the trunk or scalp. Linings of body cavities, such as the mouth or nose (mucous membranes), palms, and soles, can have a few lesions. The average child develops a few hundred blisters, most of which heal without leaving scars. A child who has had the chickenpox vaccine will have far fewer lesions.

The blister is usually described as looking like a dewdrop on a rose petal. The blister area (vesicle) is thin-walled and easily broken. Blisters become cloudy and then crust over, with healing completed within 1–3 weeks. Lesions often occur in 3 or more successive series (crops). Lesions in different stages of development may occur at the same time.
Last Modified: 19 Aug 2009