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When to Start Antiviral Therapy in Eczema Herpeticum

Prompt antiviral treatment is key to help prevent hospitalisation in this dermatological emergency

What is it?

People with atopic eczema are susceptible to many cutaneous superinfections, with bacteria (especially Staphylococcal) and viruses (especially herpes simplex).

Eczema herpeticum is due to herpes simplex superinfection in atopic eczema and can be a serious and even life-threatening complication.  

It should be considered when there is:

  • Any sudden deterioration in atopic eczema
  • Skin pain
  • Development of typical herpetic lesions – they are initially vesicles, 1-2 mm in diameter, and are arranged as clusters. They will crust over a few days; the crusts will fall off and clustered superficial, punched out erosions will be seen.  The resulting lesions can become confluent and often have a jagged margin.
  • Lymphadenopathy in adjacent nodes

Key points:

  • Skin swabs and PCR should be taken, but treatment should be initiated on clinical suspicion, as delays will result in progression.
  • Start antiviral therapy promptly
  • Oral aciclovir 400–800 mg 5 times daily, or, if available, valaciclovir 1 g twice daily, for 10–14 days or until lesions heal.
  • Intravenous aciclovir is prescribed if the patient is too sick to take tablets, or if the infection is deteriorating despite treatment.
  • Stop immunosuppressants including potent topical steroids and tacrolimus.
  • As impetiginisation is so common, start an anti-staphylococcal antibiotic.
  • Consult an ophthalmologist when eyelid or eye involvement is seen or suspected.

Why it matters:

Eczema herpeticum is considered one of the few dermatological emergencies. Prompt treatment with antiviral medication should eliminate the need for hospital admission.

Read more about Eczema Herpeticum

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Comments

  • A

    19 June 26
    Ali

    That is an interesting case of shingles on eczema, very interesting.

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  • N

    19 June 26
    Nihal Peeris


    As a GP, a very important topic

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  • a

    19 June 26
    adel

    thanks

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  • N

    19 June 26
    Nina Sawicki

    Very helpful post. I have seen it a few times. Is Valtred more effective?

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  • S

    19 June 26
    Shabbir

    I find this approach beneficial for GPs, medical professionals working at Urgent Care Centres and emergency departments. Thanks for helping medical profession and the community.

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  • G

    18 June 26
    George FitzGerald

    Excellent , thanks !

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  • D

    18 June 26
    Dr Sunita

    Wants subscribe

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