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Neonatal herpes simplex virus infection: From the maternal infection to the child outcome.

Domenico Umberto De RoseSarah BompardChiara MaddaloniIliana BersaniLudovica MartiniAlessandra SantisiDaniela LongoMaria Paola RonchettiAndrea DottaCinzia Auriti
Published in: Journal of medical virology (2023)
This review examines the recent literature on the management of herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections in neonates. We summarized the three clinical categories of maternal HSV infection during pregnancy (primary first episode, nonprimary first episode, or recurrent episode) and the mechanisms of fetal damage. Considering when the transmission of the infection from the mother to the fetus/newborn occurs, three types of neonatal infection can be distinguished: intrauterine infection (5% of cases), postnatal infection (10% of cases), and perinatal infections (85% of cases). Neonatal presentation could range from a limited disease with skin, eye, and mouth disease to central nervous system disease or disseminated disease: the treatment with acyclovir should be tailored according to symptoms and signs of infection, and virological tests. These children need a multidisciplinary follow-up, to timely intercept any deviation from normal neurodevelopmental milestones. Prevention strategies remain a challenge, in the absence of an available vaccine against HSV.
Keyphrases
  • herpes simplex virus
  • systematic review
  • preterm infants
  • physical activity
  • young adults
  • body mass index
  • hiv infected
  • depressive symptoms
  • quality improvement
  • gestational age
  • replacement therapy