Introduction
Herpes simplex virus infections occur equally between the sexes throughout the year.
-Penn State Students in State College are at high risk when they touch lesions of herpes
HSV-1 transmission typically occurs via oral-oral, oral-genital, or genital-genital contact.
HSV-2 lesions largely involve the genital tract, with the virus remaining latent in the sacral nerve root ganglia (S2–S5)
Symptoms & Signs
Both viral subtypes can cause genital and oral–facial infections
The infections caused by the two subtypes are clinically indistinguishable.
Gingivostomatitis and pharyngitis: the most frequent clinical manifestations of primary HSV-1 infection; presents as small, grouped vesicles on an erythematous base, burning and stinging sensation, swollen and tender burning and stinging
Genital: most genital infections are caused by HSV-2; presents with bilateral genital ulcerations and tender lymphadenopathy.
Ocular disease: HSV keratitis presents with vision loss, pain, and discharge; it is a major cause of blindness from corneal scarring and opacity.
Neonatal & Congenital infection: Neonatal HSV can present as excessive tearing, eye pain, conjunctival edema, vesicular lesions of the mouth, palate, tongue, seizures, irritability, fever, multiple organ failure
CNS Disease: Both viruses can cause encephalitis; the temporal lobe is often involved; it presents with
the rapid onset of fever, headache, seizures, focal neurologic signs, and impaired consciousness
Bell’s Palsy: HSV-1 is a cause of Bell palsy (facial nerve paralysis)
Esophagitis & Proctitis: usually presents with dysphagia or odynophagia, fever, retrosternal chest pain
Erythema multiforme: HSV infection is the most common cause of EM; Cutaneous eruptions occur 2 to 7 days after herpes simplex infection
Diagnosis
Diagnosis can be made by physical examination; Direct fluorescent antibody slide tests, viral culture, polymerase chain reaction
Treatment
Early antiviral therapy within 72 hours of symptom onset
Antiviral drugs: Acyclovir, Famciclovir, Valacyclovir
Severe or frequent recurrences: Chronic suppressive therapy with antivirals
Keratitis: The usage of topical corticosteroids may exacerbate the infection
Prevention
Male circumcision is associated with a lower incidence of acquiring HSV-2 infection.
Prognosis
Q. What is the most frequent sign of HSV reactivation disease? Herpes labialis
Q. What is the most frequent etiologic agent of Erythema multiforme? Herpes simplex virus
Q. What is the most common cause of fatal sporadic encephalitis in the United States? HSV-1 encephalitis
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