HSV Basics - Viral Villains Unveiled
- Family: Herpesviridae (Subfamily: Alphaherpesvirinae).
- Types & Primary Tropism:
- HSV-1 (HHV-1): Typically orofacial; latency in trigeminal ganglia.
- HSV-2 (HHV-2): Typically genital; latency in sacral ganglia (S2-S5).
- Note: Significant site crossover occurs.
- Structure: Enveloped, icosahedral capsid, linear double-stranded DNA genome.
- Transmission: Direct contact with active lesions, mucosal surfaces, or infected secretions (saliva, genital fluids). Vertical transmission possible during childbirth.
- Lifecycle Hallmark:
- Primary infection → Local replication → Retrograde axonal transport to sensory ganglia → Lifelong Latency → Reactivation (triggers: stress, UV light, fever, immunosuppression) → Anterograde transport → Recurrent mucocutaneous lesions.

- Primary infection → Local replication → Retrograde axonal transport to sensory ganglia → Lifelong Latency → Reactivation (triggers: stress, UV light, fever, immunosuppression) → Anterograde transport → Recurrent mucocutaneous lesions.
⭐ HSV establishes lifelong latency within sensory nerve ganglia, specifically the trigeminal ganglion for HSV-1 and sacral ganglia for HSV-2. This is a key characteristic enabling recurrent infections.
Clinical Picture - Rash Decisions
- Primary Orolabial (HSV-1):
- Gingivostomatitis: Painful vesicles, erosions on oral mucosa, gingiva, lips. Fever, malaise. Children (6m - 5y).
- Recurrent Orolabial (HSV-1):
- Herpes labialis ("cold sore"): Grouped vesicles on vermilion border. Prodrome: tingling, burning.
- Primary Genital (HSV-2 > HSV-1):
- Painful vesicles, pustules, erosions on genitalia. Systemic: fever, myalgia, lymphadenopathy.
- Recurrent Genital:
- Milder, shorter, localized. Prodrome common.
- Lesion Morphology:
- Grouped vesicles on erythematous base ("dew drops on rose petal").
- Vesicle → pustule → ulcer → crust.
- Specific Sites/Forms:
- Herpetic Whitlow: Painful HSV on fingers/toes. Healthcare workers.
- Eczema Herpeticum: Widespread HSV in eczema. Severe, life-threatening.
- Herpes Gladiatorum: Wrestlers, contact sports.
- Erythema Multiforme: Post-HSV; target lesions.
⭐ Tzanck smear: Multinucleated giant cells, ballooning keratinocytes.
Diagnosis & DDx - Spotting the Suspect
Clinical suspicion: Grouped vesicles on erythematous base.
- Lab Confirmation:
- Tzanck Smear: Multinucleated giant cells (MNGCs). (📌 Tzanck: All Nuclei Clubbed)
- Viral Culture: Gold standard, but slow.
- PCR: Rapid, highest sensitivity & specificity. Test of choice.
- DFA: Detects viral antigens.
- Serology (IgM/IgG): For primary infection, typing.

- Key DDx:
- Herpes Zoster: Dermatomal.
- Aphthous Stomatitis: Oral, no vesicles.
- Hand, Foot, Mouth Disease: Typical distribution.
- Impetigo: Honey-colored crusts.
- Erythema Multiforme: Target lesions (often HSV-triggered).
⭐ Tzanck smear showing multinucleated giant cells is a classic, rapid diagnostic clue for HSV/VZV infections.
Treatment & Prevention - Calming the Chaos
-
Antiviral Therapy (Cornerstone):
- Acyclovir: Oral (Primary: 200mg 5x/day, 7-10d; Recurrent: 800mg TDS, 2d or 200mg 5x/day, 5d), IV, topical.
- Valacyclovir: (Episodic: 500mg-1g BD, 3-5d) - ↑ bioavailability.
- Famciclovir: (Episodic: 125-250mg BD/TDS, 5d).
- Mechanism: Inhibit viral DNA polymerase.
- Duration: Episodic (2-10 days based on drug/severity); Suppressive (long-term).
-
Indications: Genital/Orolabial herpes, Keratitis, Neonatal HSV, Encephalitis.
-
Supportive Care: Analgesia, hygiene.
-
Resistant HSV: Foscarnet, Cidofovir (immunocompromised).
-
Prevention:
- Avoid triggers (stress, UV).
- Barrier methods (condoms).
- Suppressive therapy for >6 recurrences/year.
- C-section if active genital lesions at term.
- Patient education on asymptomatic shedding.
⭐ Acyclovir requires dose adjustment in renal impairment; it's a common exam question.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- HSV-1 typically causes orolabial herpes; HSV-2 primarily causes genital herpes.
- Primary infection often more severe; herpetic gingivostomatitis (HSV-1) is common in children.
- Virus establishes latency in sensory nerve ganglia, leading to recurrent outbreaks.
- Tzanck smear shows multinucleated giant cells & Cowdry A inclusions; PCR is gold standard.
- Acyclovir is the first-line antiviral treatment.
- Key complications: Eczema herpeticum (Kaposi's varicelliform eruption), herpes keratitis, herpes encephalitis.
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