Abstract
The laboratory diagnosis of genital herpes simplex virus (HSV) infections in various patient groups with diverse clinical manifestations including asymptomatic pregnant women with history of genital herpes and in a high prevalence group consisting of male patients with recurring genital ulcerations is described. HSV was detected by conventional cell culture and also a CPE-enhancement technique using human embryonic lung fibroblasts (MRC-5) and Vero cells with subsequent typing of isolate by HSV type-specific monoclonal antibodies. Delayed development of CPE and reduced isolation rates were detected using Vero cells. Follow-up sampling of subsequent episodes of genital ulcerations in those with history of recurrence but an initial negative cell culture result, increased the isolation rate substantially and enabled the confirmation of diagnosis of genital HSV infection.