“…Postherpetic neuralgia, ie, chronic, unrelenting pain persisting in a dermatomal pattern following herpes zoster, is often a debilitating problem for patients and a treatment frustration for physicians [1,2,3••,4-25]. This is not to imply that postherpetic neuralgia is an inevitable outcome of h e r p e s z o s t e r, a s t h e t w o a r e t h o u g h t t o b e separate diseases with different pathophysiologic and clinical aspects [1,15].The purpose of this article is to examine the contribution of psychosocial and physiologic stress in the development of both herpes zoster and postherpetic neuralgia, and to offer treatment suggestions. Whereas health care professionals have little or no control over the patient's stress prior to developing herpes zoster, they can help reduce the patient's emotional and physiologic stress levels after he or she develops herpes zoster and possibly help prevent the development of postherpetic neuralgia.…”