HERPES SIMPLEX IN CHILDREN: SYMPTOMS, HOME CARE AND TREATMENT
Signs and symptoms
Oral herpes (type 1 infection) causes multiple ulcers of the membranes of the mouth (lips, cheeks, tongue, and palate) or the eyeballs. The ulcers are painful and are accompanied by painful, red, swollen gums and swollen lymph nodes in the neck. The child’s fever may climb to 40.6°C. The canker sores have a distinctive appearance and are easily distinguished from other mouth sores such as gumboils. Canker sores are open, red ulcers which have a scooped-out appearance, unlike gumboils which protrude above the surface of the membranes. When oral herpes appears as fever blisters, the blisters can be mistaken for impetigo. Fever blisters, however, are usually more painful. To confuse the diagnosis, fever blisters may become further infected with impetigo.
Oral herpes lasts seven to ten days, but the virus remains in the body and may cause recurrent outbreaks. This recurrent condition is contagious each time it appears.
Genital herpes (type 2 infection) causes painful ulcers and blisters on the genitals. Like oral herpes, genital herpes is contagious when the blisters are present and often recurrent.
Home care
For oral herpes, give aspirin or paracetamol to relieve pain. Have the child eat bland, soothing foods such as ice cream, gelatin desserts, puddings, and milk. Encourage an older child to rinse the mouth with a mild table salt solution. Canker sores can be treated in older children with triamcinolone in dental ointment form, or with thick solutions of local anesthetic available from the pharmacy. Antibiotic ointment applied to fever blisters may prevent painful cracking and lessen the chances of impetigo developing. For genital herpes, warm soaks help relieve inflammation and pain. There is a drug that has been used by adults to lessen the recurring attacks, but this drug has not been tested in children.
• Herpes simplex of the eyeball is serious and requires the immediate attention of an eye doctor.
• Herpes can be severe in an infant. Adults or children with herpes should be kept away from the baby. If a baby contracts herpes, consult a doctor.
• There is no cure for recurrent herpes.
Medical treatment
The doctor will probably prescribe eye drops to treat herpes of the eyeball. An experimental drug, Cytosine arabinoside (Ara-C) is available to treat life-threatening complications of herpes, such as may occur in infants. If a child with herpes has a severely ulcerated mouth, hospitalization may be necessary for intravenous fluids to be given until the child can swallow normally again.
A Caesarean section (delivery by surgery) may be performed in the case of a pregnant woman who has genital herpes and whose baby might be exposed to the disease during a normal delivery.
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Posted: April 28th, 2009 under General health.
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