Herpes simplex
For patient information on congenital herpes, click here
For patient information on genital herpes, click here
Herpes simplex | |
Electron micrograph of Herpes simplex virus. | |
ICD-10 | A60, B00, G05.1, P35.2 |
ICD-9 | 054.0, 054.1, 054.2, 054.3, 771.2 |
DiseasesDB | 5841 Template:DiseasesDB2 |
MeSH | D006561 |
Herpes simplex Microchapters |
Patient Information |
Classification |
Herpes simplex On the Web |
Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1], Associate Editor-In-Chief: Cafer Zorkun, M.D., Ph.D. [2]
Overview
Subtypes
- Orofacial infection
- Anogenital infection
- Ocular infection
- Herpes Encephalitis
- Neonatal herpes
- Herpetic whitlow
- Herpes gladiatorum
Epidemiology & Demographics
Asymptomatic shedding
Recurrences and triggers
Transmission
Mode of Transmission | Population At Risk | Prevention of Transmission
Diagnosis
History and Symptoms | Physical examination | Serology | Direct detection of virus
Treatment
- Antiviral Therapy: Overview | Antivirals for First Episode of Genital Herpes | Antivirals for Recurrent Genital Herpes | Antivirals for Severe Disease
Patient Counseling
Legal redress
Whether the law can help a person who catches herpes depends on the jurisdiction where it was contracted as legal jurisdictions define their own rules regarding the transmission of STIs such as herpes.[1] There can be both criminal and civil possibilities. For example, in the criminal case of R. v. Sullivan heard in England and Wales, an attempt was made to prosecute Sullivan for sexual assault after his partner experienced a primary outbreak of genital herpes, on the basis that he had failed to reveal the fact that he had herpes. The presiding judge dismissed the prosecution case during preliminary hearings, citing inability to prove prior knowledge and the trial did not take place.[2] Civil claims for transmission of herpes are, for their part, usually based on negligence if transmission was accidental and battery if deliberate. The first successful case to allow such a claim in the United States was Kathleen K. v. Robert B., decided by the California Court of Appeals.[3]
References
- ↑ Webpage on social aspects of genital herpes
- ↑ "The transmission of HIV as a criminal offence". Retrieved 2008-03-05.
- ↑ Gold-bikin, L.Z. [?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&q=info:5smAUslPm8sJ:scholar.google.com/&output=viewport "Herpes Breeds New Legal Epidemic: Fraud and Negligence Suits"] Check
|url=
value (help). Family Advocate. 7: 26. Retrieved 2008-03-05.
External links
General
- Genital Herpes Fact Sheet at The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- Paper - Genital Herpes: A Hidden Epidemic at FDA
Images
- Links to genital herpes pictures (Hardin MD/University of Iowa
- Herpes photo library at Dermnet
- Pictures of Orofacial Herpes (Coldsores) (VisualDxHealth)
- Genital Herpes Pictures
Other
- Herpes Blood Tests Quick Reference Guide
- Updated Herpes Handbook from Westover Heights Clinic
- "The Importance and Practicalities of Patient Counseling in the Prevention and Management of Genital Herpes" (2004) at Medscape
- International Herpes Management Forum
- Provides Ratios of Lysine to Arginine in Common Foods
Template:STD/STI Template:Viral diseases
cs:Jednoduchý opar
da:Herpes
de:Herpes
eo:Herpeto
ko:단순 포진
id:Herpes simpleks
it:Herpes
he:הרפס
ms:Herpes
nl:Genitale herpes
no:Herpesvirusinfeksjon
sk:Jednoduchý opar
sr:Херпес
sv:Herpes