| "Descrizione" by Al222 (24830 pt) | 2026-Mar-02 15:59 |
“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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Clinically meaningful resistance is more likely in:
immunocompromised patients
poor clinical response despite appropriate therapy
Specialist management is usually required.
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.
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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