Abstract

Although HSV-1 has been implicated in facial palsy for a long time, testing and treating for HSV is not routine. The lack of a meaningful demonstration of how HSV-1 would cause facial palsy has limited progress in this field. Herein we demonstrate that the depth of the lip HSV-1 infection defines the course of the disease, with deeper subcutaneous infection allowing virus access to the facial nerve and causing facial palsy. HSV-1 inoculated subcutaneously caused extensive facial paralysis in cotton rats Sigmodon hispidus, while virus inoculated in the same area of the lip by skin surface abrasion did not. Demyelination along the facial nerve (CN VII) accompanied subcutaneous HSV-1 infection and was identified as the possible underlying mechanism of the disease. This causality demonstration is particularly important in light of increased facial palsy outbreaks associated with SARS-CoV-2 infection and SARS-CoV-2 and influenza vaccinations.

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