1. HSV-1: The Most Common Cause of Herpes Eye Infections
HSV-1 is the leading cause of ocular herpes, often due to reactivation of a latent virus in the trigeminal nerve.
Types of Eye Infections Caused:
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Herpes Simplex Keratitis (HSK): Infection of the cornea
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Symptoms: Eye pain, redness, blurred vision, photophobia, tearing
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Types:
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Epithelial keratitis: Virus replicates in corneal cells (dendritic ulcers visible with fluorescein)
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Stromal keratitis: Immune response damages deeper corneal layers → scarring and vision loss
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Conjunctivitis: Redness and irritation in the eye
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Iridocyclitis: Inflammation of the iris and ciliary body
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Retinitis (rare): Inflammation of the retina, more severe and vision-threatening
2. HSV-2: Rare in the Eye, but More Serious When It Happens
HSV-2 is less likely to affect the eye in adults but can do so in neonates infected during vaginal delivery.
Neonatal HSV-2 Ocular Infection:
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May involve:
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Conjunctivitis
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Keratitis
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Chorioretinitis (posterior eye involvement)
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Often part of disseminated or CNS disease in newborns
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Requires urgent antiviral treatment (e.g., IV acyclovir)
🧪 Diagnosis
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Clinical exam using slit-lamp and fluorescein dye
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PCR or viral culture (from conjunctival swabs or corneal scrapings)
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Serologic testing if needed
💊 Treatment
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Topical antivirals (e.g., trifluridine, ganciclovir gel) for epithelial keratitis
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Oral antivirals (e.g., acyclovir, valacyclovir) for stromal or recurrent infections
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Topical corticosteroids sometimes used with antiviral cover for stromal disease
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Avoid steroids alone — they can worsen HSV eye infections
⚠️ Complications
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Corneal scarring
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Vision loss
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Recurrent flare-ups
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Glaucoma (from uveitis or steroid use)
If you're experiencing eye symptoms and suspect HSV, it's crucial to see an ophthalmologist immediately, as early treatment greatly reduces the risk of permanent damage.