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Antiviral for herpes
"Descrizione"
by Al222 (24830 pt)
2026-Mar-02 15:59

Antivirals for herpes (HSV-1/HSV-2 and herpes zoster)

What “herpes” usually means

“Herpes” most commonly refers to:

  • Herpes simplex virus (HSV-1 / HSV-2): oral and genital herpes.

  • Herpes zoster (VZV): shingles (reactivation of chickenpox).

They share antiviral options, but goals and timing differ.

Core antiviral drugs and how they work

Standard oral options:

  • Acyclovir

  • Valacyclovir (a prodrug of acyclovir; often more convenient dosing)

  • Famciclovir (a prodrug of penciclovir)

Mechanism (high level): they inhibit viral DNA polymerase, reducing replication. They do not eradicate latent virus; they reduce severity, duration, and in some HSV settings may reduce transmission risk.

HSV: typical treatment strategies

For HSV, common approaches are:

  • Episodic therapy: start as early as possible (ideally at prodrome/very early lesions) to shorten and soften outbreaks.

  • Suppressive therapy: daily dosing to reduce recurrence frequency and help lower transmission risk in selected situations.

Severe/complicated disease (e.g., CNS involvement, disseminated infection, significant immunosuppression) may require IV acyclovir and hospital-level care.

Shingles: why early treatment matters

For shingles, timing is central:

  • Antivirals work best when started within 72 hours of symptom onset (often rash onset), especially to reduce severity and complications—notably with ocular involvement or higher-risk patients.

Safety, key precautions, interactions

Across anti-herpes antivirals:

  • Renal function matters: drugs are largely renally cleared; dose reductions are commonly needed with renal impairment (especially valacyclovir/acyclovir).

  • Hydration can help reduce renal adverse effects in some contexts.

  • Common side effects: nausea, headache, GI upset.

  • Extra caution in: older adults, dehydration, concomitant nephrotoxic agents, immunocompromised patients.

Resistance (when to suspect)

Clinically meaningful resistance is more likely in:

  • immunocompromised patients

  • poor clinical response despite appropriate therapy

Specialist management is usually required.

When to seek urgent medical care

  • Eye symptoms or rash near the eye.

  • Neurologic symptoms (severe headache, neck stiffness, confusion).

  • Pregnancy, neonates, significant immunosuppression.

  • Extensive shingles rash, high fever, rapid worsening, uncontrolled pain.

Prevention

  • Shingles vaccination is the most effective preventive measure for VZV reactivation and complications.

  • For HSV, prevention focuses on recurrence management, suppressive therapy when indicated, and risk-reduction practices.

Disclaimer: The information on this page is for informational purposes only and does not replace the advice of a doctor or other qualified healthcare professional. I am not a doctor and I do not provide diagnoses, treatments, or prescriptions; I am only reporting what my doctor indicated when I had a herpes episode. If you have questions, symptoms, or need to make treatment decisions, always consult your doctor. In case of an emergency, contact emergency services.

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