Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Genital Herpes

On this page

Etiopathogenesis - Viral Villains

  • Causative Agents: Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) - DNA virus (Herpesviridae).
    • HSV-1: Traditionally orofacial; increasing anogenital cases.
    • HSV-2: Predominant anogenital cause; more recurrences.
  • Key Features:
    • Lifelong latency in sacral sensory ganglia.
    • Reactivation triggers: Stress, menses, illness, immunosuppression.
  • Transmission:
    • Direct contact with lesions or infected secretions.
    • Sexual: Vaginal, anal, oral.
    • Asymptomatic viral shedding is common.
    • Vertical: Intrapartum (mother-to-child).

⭐ HSV-2 is the primary cause of genital herpes & has more frequent recurrences than genital HSV-1.

Clinical Features - Spotting Sores

  • Primary Infection (First Episode):

    • Incubation: 3-7 days (range 2-14).
    • Prodrome: Fever, malaise, myalgia, local pain/paresthesia.
    • Lesions: Multiple, bilateral, grouped vesicles → painful ulcers → crusting. Heal in 2-4 weeks.
      • Locations: Penis, vulva, perineum, cervix, anus.
    • Systemic symptoms common; tender inguinal lymphadenopathy.
    • Complications: Aseptic meningitis, urinary retention (Elsberg syndrome).
  • Recurrent Infection:

    • Prodrome: Localized tingling, burning, or pain (milder, shorter).
    • Lesions: Fewer, unilateral, smaller, less painful. Heal in 7-10 days.
    • Systemic symptoms rare.
    • Triggers: Stress, illness, menses, local trauma.
  • Asymptomatic Viral Shedding: Common between outbreaks; source of transmission.

⭐ Most primary genital herpes infections are subclinical or unrecognized; many individuals with HSV-2 are unaware of their infection.

Genital herpes blisters on dark and light skin

Diagnosis - Nailing It

  • Clinical: History of recurrent, painful genital vesicles or ulcers.
  • Lab Tests (from active lesions):
    • PCR (NAAT): Gold Standard. Highest sensitivity & specificity.

      ⭐ PCR is the investigation of choice (IOC) for active lesions & HSV meningitis/encephalitis.

    • Viral Culture: Specific, but sensitivity ↓ with lesion healing.
    • Tzanck Smear: Shows multinucleated giant cells (📌 Tzanck for this quick clue!). Low sensitivity, not type-specific.
  • Serology (Type-specific IgG): Detects past infection; useful for asymptomatic/atypical cases or partner evaluation. Not for acute diagnosis.

Management - Antiviral Arsenal

  • Drugs: Acyclovir (ACV), Valacyclovir (VCV), Famciclovir (FCV).
  • Primary Episode (7-10 days):
    • ACV: 400 mg TID.
    • VCV: 1 g BID.
    • FCV: 250 mg TID.
  • Episodic (Recurrent): Initiate at prodrome/first sign.
    • ACV: 800 mg TID (2d) OR 400 mg TID (5d).
    • VCV: 500 mg BID (3d) OR 1 g OD (5d).
    • FCV: 1 g BID (1d) OR 125 mg BID (5d).
  • Suppressive (≥6 recurrences/yr):
    • ACV: 400 mg BID.
    • VCV: 500 mg - 1 g OD.
    • FCV: 250 mg BID.
  • Pregnancy:
    • ACV preferred. Suppressive therapy from 36 weeks gestation (e.g., ACV 400 mg TID or VCV 500 mg BID) to ↓ risk of outbreak at delivery & ↓ Cesarean section rates.

⭐ For Acyclovir-resistant HSV, particularly in immunocompromised individuals, Foscarnet or IV Cidofovir are alternative treatments.

Complications & Prevention - Risks & Reassurance

  • Complications:
    • Neonatal herpes (↑risk if primary infection in 3rd trimester)
    • Aseptic meningitis
    • Urinary retention (Elsberg syndrome)
    • Erythema multiforme
    • Proctitis (MSM)
  • Prevention:
    • Consistent condom use (↓risk, not eliminative)
    • Antiviral suppressive therapy (↓transmission)
    • Avoid sexual contact during outbreaks
  • Reassurance:
    • Not life-threatening in immunocompetent
    • Effective treatments manage symptoms & ↓recurrences

⭐ Neonatal herpes: ~50% risk if mother acquires primary genital herpes near delivery; <1% if recurrent herpes or seropositive before pregnancy. Cesarean delivery indicated for active lesions at term in primary infection to prevent transmission.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Caused mainly by HSV-2; HSV-1 less common for genital lesions.
  • Presents with painful, grouped vesicles or ulcers on an erythematous base.
  • Tzanck smear (multinucleated giant cells); PCR is diagnostic gold standard.
  • Acyclovir (IV for severe/disseminated), Valacyclovir, Famciclovir are first-line.
  • Recurrences are common; suppressive therapy for ≥6 episodes/year.
  • Complications: aseptic meningitis, neonatal herpes, Erythema Multiforme.
  • No cure; virus establishes latency in sacral sensory ganglia.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE