No single treatment relieves postherpetic neuralgia for everyone. It often takes a mix of treatments to ease the pain.
Lidocaine skin patches
These are small, bandage-like patches. They contain the pain-relieving medicine lidocaine. These patches can be cut to fit only the affected area. You put the patches on painful skin to get short-term relief. Your health care provider may prescribe them for you. Or you can buy the patches off the shelf at a slightly lower dose. Store them in a place that's away from children.
Capsaicin skin patch
Capsaicin comes from the seeds of hot chili peppers. A high amount of capsaicin is available as a skin patch to ease pain called Qutenza. You need to get it from your health care provider. A trained health care professional places the patch on your skin after using a medicine to numb the affected area.
The process takes at least two hours. That's because health care professionals need to watch for any side effects after the patch goes on. The patch lowers some people's pain for up to three months. If it works, you can get a new patch every three months.
Anticonvulsants
Some medicines for seizures also can ease the pain of postherpetic neuralgia. They include gabapentin (Neurontin, Gralise, others) and pregabalin (Lyrica). These medicines calm injured nerves. Side effects include:
- Feeling sleepy.
- Trouble thinking clearly.
- Not feeling steady.
- Swelling in the feet.
Antidepressants
Some depression medicines can do more than treat a mood disorder. They affect key brain chemicals that play a role in both depression and how the body interprets pain. They can help for pain even when you do not have depression. These medicines include:
- Nortriptyline (Pamelor).
- Amitriptyline.
- Duloxetine (Cymbalta).
- Venlafaxine (Effexor XR).
Health care providers often prescribe antidepressants for postherpetic neuralgia in smaller doses than they do for depression alone.
Common side effects of these medications include:
- Feeling sleepy.
- Getting a dry mouth.
- Feeling faint.
- Gaining weight.
Opioid painkillers
Opioids are very strong pain medicines that a health care provider can prescribe. Some people with postherpetic neuralgia might need medicines that contain tramadol (Conzip, Qdolo, others), oxycodone (Percocet, Oxycet, others) or morphine.
Opioids can cause side effects such as:
- A mild dizzy feeling.
- Sleepiness.
- Confusion.
- Trouble making bowel movements.
In the United States, the CDC urges health care providers to use opioids only for cancer-related problems and a few other serious health issues. The agency wants providers to think twice before they prescribe these powerful medicines for health problems such as postherpetic neuralgia. That's because opioids raise the risk of addiction and death in some people.
An opioid may be prescribed for postherpetic neuralgia only if safer treatments haven't worked. Before you start taking an opioid, your provider should:
- Explain the medicine's benefits and risks.
- Set up treatment goals for pain relief.
- Make a plan to help you safely stop using the medicine if the risks become too big.
Take the lowest possible dose of an opioid. And get checkups as often as your health care provider suggests.
Driving while on opioids can be dangerous. And it's not safe to take an opioid along with alcohol or other medicines.
Steroid shots
Shots of steroids into the spine may help some people with postherpetic neuralgia.