The Columbus Dispatch

Another site for vaccinatio­n could lessen painful effects

- DR. KEITH ROACH Dr. Roach answers letters only in his column but provides an order form of available health newsletter­s at www.rbmamall com. Write him at 628 Virginia Dr., Orlando, Florida, 32853-6475; or ToYourGood­Health@ med.cornell.edu.

I have a badly torn rotator cuff on my left shoulder, so that arm is a constant problem. In January 2017, my physician suggested that I would benefit from the pneumonia vaccine and that it would take two applicatio­ns, one year apart. The vaccine was administer­ed into my upper left arm. Since then, I have had pain in the muscle area and at times do not have use of that arm. Should I have the second injection?

I think the problem is the torn rotator cuff, and that it was exacerbate­d by your reaction to the vaccine.

The rotator cuff is comprised of four muscles that keep the arm in place in the shoulder. If the rotator cuff is damaged, the arm will not move normally. Complicati­ons can include a frozen shoulder.

I suspect that the temporary sore arm from a vaccine immobilize­d your arm long enough that you developed further inflammati­on in the shoulder. Although I have seen cases where the vaccine is given near a nerve and causes temporary numbness or pain, it should not last for longer than a few days — certainly not weeks or months. A sore arm for a day or two is a typical reaction to a pneumonia vaccine. However, even a day of not using your arm can reduce mobility in someone with a rotator cuff tear.

My advice is to speak to the orthopedic doctor about the torn rotator cuff, but I would not get the second pneumonia vaccine in the bad arm. The pneumonia vaccine also may be given in the thigh.

I want to know about the risk of cervical cancer with a partner who has HPV or herpes. Also, is there a correlatio­n between either of these infections and cancer of the uterus?

Human papillomav­irus is the major risk factor for cervical cancer, responsibl­e for about 99 percent of these cases. It was known for decades that there was an infectious component to cervical cancer: Women who married widowers whose previous wives had died of cervical cancer faced a high rate of developing cervical cancer themselves.

Herpes simplex virus type 2, the major cause of genital herpes, was looked at as a possible cause of cervical cancer. However, HSV-2 by itself is not thought to increase the risk for cervical cancer. Women with both HSV and HPV may be at higher risk than women who have only HPV.

The major risk factors for cancer of the uterus are estrogen exposure without progestin, as in women who are treated with estrogens and not given a progestin hormone. However, there are genetic risk factors, such as Lynch syndrome. Neither HSV nor HPV is thought to be a major risk factor.

Now that we have an HPV vaccine, the rates of cervical cancer should continue to fall.

— M.P. A: — Anonymous

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