Herpes Simplex, Primary or Recurrent
Potential Effect on Fetus
In Utero:
Primary
- Congenital Syndrome (rare)
Neonatal:
Primary and Recurrent
- Mucocutaneous lesions
- Disseminated disease
- Encephalitis
Rate of Perinatal Transmission
- Transmission occurs at time of delivery in up to 90% of cases.
- Vaginal delivery:
- primary – 30-50%
- recurrent – 2-5%
- Neonatal HSV infection affects 1/17,000 births (half of these related to primary infection).
- 59% of neonatal disease is skin/eye/ mouth
- 23% encephalitis
- 18% disseminated disease
Maternal Screening
- Consult Virology lab in event of suspected primary infection in pregnancy.
- Inspect for lesions at time of delivery (maternal shedding can occur in the absence of lesions).
Prevention
Primary infection:
- Consult Infectious Diseases for treatment.
- If occurs in 3rd trimester, consider pre-labour booked ceasarean section.
Recurrent infection:
- In women with known recurrent disease, recommend prophylaxis at 36 weeks to delivery with acyclovir 400mg PO tid.
- If lesions present at time of delivery, recommend ceasarean section.