Tsuda Yasumasa, Matsushige Takeshi, Inoue Hirofumi, Hoshide Madoka, Hamano Hiroki, Hasegawa Keiko, Moriuchi Masako, Moriuchi Hiroyuki, Hasegawa Shunji
Department of Pediatrics, Yamaguchi University Graduate School of Medicine, Ube, Yamaguchi, Japan.
Division of Neonatology, Yamaguchi Grand Medical Center, Hofu, Yamaguchi, Japan.
Neonatology. 2025;122(1):27-31. doi: 10.1159/000540506. Epub 2024 Aug 13.
Intrauterine herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection is uncommon and challenging to diagnose, requiring detection of HSV in skin lesions within 48 h post-birth.
A preterm female infant presented with the typical triad of blisters, microcephaly, and chorioretinitis, but the initial diagnostic approach was elusive due to negative results for TORCH pathogens from vesicles/serum. Referred at 7 months for developmental delay and epilepsy, her brain imaging showed calcification and cortical dysplasia. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) of her preserved dried umbilical cord detected HSV-2 DNA, diagnosing intrauterine HSV infection. HSV-2 was later found in relapsed blisters at 8 months but not in cerebrospinal fluid or brain tissue. A literature review identified 104 congenital/intrauterine HSV cases; 28.8% presented the typical triad, and 50% were diagnosed using specimens collected 48 h post-birth.
This case marks the first retrospective diagnosis of intrauterine HSV infection via PCR on preserved umbilical cord, underscoring its diagnostic value.