Congenital and Neonatal Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV) Encephalitis

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Route of spread: hematogenous and intraneuronal.

Dessinated infection: the principal organs involved are liver, brain, and adrenals; however, infection can affect other organs. The prognosis is poor.

Encephalitis: encephalitis can present as an isolated finding or as a component of multiorgan disseminated infection. Nearly one-third of all babies with neonatal HSV infection have only encephalitis. Babies with disseminated infection, but not those with encephalitis alone, often have skin vesicles. Other clinical manifestations include seizures (both partial and generalized), lethargy, irritability, tremors, poor feeding, temperature instability, bulging fontael, and pyradimal tract signs. CSF findings include increase in protein content and even subtle change in CNS may be associated with significant developmental abnormalities. Similar to adult cases, bilateral temporal lobes are affected.

Mortality: death occurs in about half the cases with localized CNS disease who are not treated and is usually related to involvement of the brain stem.

Clinical diagnosis: viral culture is definitive; PCR is fast, sensitive and specific; serologic test is not helpful. Virus is almost never detectable in CSF by culture.

Time of infection: