May 13, im not sure.

August 12th, 2010

i dire answers i comprise two undefiled re ddish bumps on the stanchion of my penis it doesn’t look herpes but i am alarmed that it is..and the chick i slept with had an odor to her Virgina when we elementary had sex but she told me she straight gotten mistaken her period..so i thought nothing of it..idk I’m alarmed but can u suffer with more then ditty std at the constant time..herpes is the biggest item of appalled of HIV AND AIDS…but herpes the breakouts and stuff..can some bromide suit take measures me with some info..

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Vaginal Treatment May Prevent Herpes

July 5th, 2009

Topical Use of siRNAs Keeps Mice Herpes-Free; Approach Has Anti-HIV Potential

By Daniel J. DeNoon
WebMD Health News

Jan. 21, 2009 — Small anti-herpes RNA molecules applied to the vagina protect mice against new herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) infections for one week.

The preventive treatment uses small interfering RNA (siRNA) molecules. These tiny bits of genetic material are designed to switch off specific genes.

The herpes treatment uses two siRNAs. One keeps vaginal cells from producing a molecule that the herpes virus uses to infect cells. The other siRNA targets a viral gene required for herpes reproduction.

“One of the attractive features of the compound we developed is that it creates in the tissue a state that’s resistant to infection, even if applied up to a week before sexual exposure,” Harvard researcher Judy Lieberman, PhD, says in a news release. “This aspect has a real practicality to it. If we can reproduce these results in people, this could have a powerful impact on preventing transmission.”

HSV-2 is the main cause of genital herpes. It’s considered a sexually transmitted infection, although mother-to-infant transmission occurs during the birth process.

Researchers have long believed that herpes and HIV could be prevented by vaginal application of antiviral agents. But such “vaginal microbicides,” even if effective, must be safe, non-messy, and long-lasting to be of real use to women.

Lieberman’s team came up with an earlier version of their topical siRNA but found that the formulation they used actually encouraged herpes infection. Their current, two-pronged siRNA treatment avoids this problem — at least in mice.

However, the same target they used in mouse vaginal cells — a molecule called nectin-1 — is also found on human vaginal cells. Blocking nectin-1 doesn’t seem to harm mice. It may not harm humans, either, as the molecule seems to be needed during development but not during adult life.

That suggests the drug might not be safe during pregnancy. But if it works in sexually active adults, it would still be an enormous benefit to human health. An estimated 536 million people worldwide are infected with HSV-2. And HSV-2 infection makes it easier for a person to get infected with HIV.

Lieberman and colleagues suggest their siRNA approach might also work against HIV.

Their study appears in the Jan. 22 issue of Cell Host & Microbe.

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Herpes Often Unknowingly Spread

June 26th, 2009

Young Women Who Don’t Know They Are Infected May Fuel Epidemic

By Charlene Laino
WebMD Health News

Oct. 30, 2008 (Washington D.C.) — Young women who don’t know they have the virus that causes genital herpes could be unknowingly fueling the herpes epidemic, new research suggests.

Although they have no symptoms of the disease and have not been tested, many women are actively shedding the virus in their genital tracts, says Kenneth Fife, MD, of Indiana University School of Medicine in Indianapolis.

“They’re often infectious and don’t know it,” he tells WebMD.

Nationwide, at least 45 million people 12 and older, or one out of five adolescents and adults, have genital herpes, according to the CDC. It’s most often caused by herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2).

Fife and colleagues studied 127 young women. They entered the study when they were 14 to 18 and followed for four to six years. Only three of the women had been diagnosed with genital herpes, and the rest hadn’t been tested before.

Two-Thirds of Women Actively Shedding Virus

Over the course of the study, about one-fourth of the women who originally tested negative for HSV-2 subsequently tested positive.

But what was really of concern, Fife says, was that two-thirds of the women for whom genital swabs were available were actively shedding virus. “That’s when they can spread the disease,” he says.

Had the women not been in the study, they might never have been tested, Fife says. Most had no symptoms — not even common symptoms like genital pain or vaginal discharge, which can be caused by a number of disorders, he says.

The research was presented at a joint meeting of the American Society for Microbiology and the Infectious Diseases Society of America.

Viral Shedding Continues for More Than a Decade

In a separate study, University of Washington researchers found that even 10 years after being diagnosed with HSV-2, adults continue to shed virus nearly 14% of days, says Paul Auwaerter, MD, of Johns Hopkins.

The study involved 89 otherwise healthy adults with documented HSV-2 infection. As in the Indiana study, most had no symptoms, he says. Auwaerter, who served on the committee that chose which studies to highlight at the meeting, was not involved with the work.

Together, these findings “show why this virus is so successfully spread among the sexually active population,” he tells WebMD.

“Many of these women had no symptoms and hence were unaware they had herpes and hence more likely to spread it. You need to be screened specifically for it,” Auwaerter says.

Hormonal Contraception May Lower the Body’s Natural Defenses

Also at the meeting, researchers reported that the pill and other forms of hormonal contraception may lower a woman’s natural defenses against HSV-2.

Gail Shust, MD, and colleagues at Albert Einstein School of Medicine studied the genital fluid from 16 healthy women aged 18 to 25 who were at low risk of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases. Genital fluid has been shown to have natural antimicrobial activity against HSV-2, Shust says.

Nine of the 16 women were using hormonal contraception: Seven were on the pill, one used injectable Depo-Provera, and one the vaginal ring NuvaRing.

Results showed genital fluid from the women using hormonal contraception had significantly less anti-herpes activity compared with the other women, she tells WebMD.

Shust stresses that the study was small and the findings need confirmation in other research.

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Dating With Herpes

June 17th, 2009

One woman’s story.

I had barely finished my first semester of college when I found out I had herpes. A high school friend and I wound up taking our friendship a little further, and 20 seconds into the act that would change my life forever, he stopped.

My friend said I was too much like a sister, and he couldn’t continue. Then he left. I worried about how that incident would affect our friendship. Little did I know my worries would extend far beyond that concern.

Less than a week later, I found myself in excruciating pain. It hurt to walk, and I couldn’t use soap anywhere near my genital area. I knew enough about sexually transmitted diseases to know that I had herpes, but I didn’t know exactly what to do.

The Diagnosis

As I sat in the college health center waiting to see a doctor, I watched my very short-lived social life drift by. I was thinking that I’d probably never go on another date, or get a boyfriend for that matter, and I’d certainly never have sex again.

The nurse who examined me revealed that she had herpes and said it was no big deal. She had been free of outbreaks for 12 years, and the same might be the case for me, she said.

Genital herpes is a contagious viral infection that remains permanently in the nerve cells. Many people are unaware they have it, because they don’t experience symptoms or because they attribute the symptoms to something else. During an outbreak, blisters or sores appear on or around the genital area. Some people never experience a second outbreak.

The nurse taught me how to manage the virus, but managing my personal life was another story.

The Encounter

When I confronted my friend about the situation, I asked if he knew that he had herpes. ”I thought it was a cut,” he said.

”How would you cut yourself there?” I asked.

Years later, I’ve come to the realization that he knew he had herpes, and that is the reason he stopped in the midst of our sexual adventure. Our friendship, unfortunately, ended as quickly as the act. It was hard enough to face the fact that we’d had sex, or tried to, and it was much harder to cope with the fact that I had caught an incurable sexually transmitted disease.

The Silent Approach

In 1989, when I got herpes, the nurse told me I couldn’t transmit the virus unless I was having an outbreak. (At the time, many doctors and other health care providers believed this to be the case, although a number of research studies had already suggested otherwise.) So, I decided to keep quiet. For three years, I had a boyfriend who never knew I had herpes. Each time I had an outbreak, which for me consisted of a very small cluster of blisters that lasted two or three days, I’d pretend I had a yeast infection and say I couldn’t have sex until it was gone.

By the time I finished college in 1994, the possibility of spreading the virus even when you didn’t have an outbreak had become more widely accepted by health care providers. I was still uncomfortable about bringing up the subject, but now I didn’t have much of a choice. I didn’t date for awhile, but inevitably, I met someone.

Telling All

I held off on sex for as long as I could, but it got more and more difficult. One day, my new beau reassured me, “I’m disease-free, I just got tested. You have nothing to worry about.”

I appreciated his honesty and knew I had to tell him that he was the one who had something to worry about.

Soon, my secret was out. I explained that I had herpes, and that was why I was being so cautious. I told him that to my knowledge I had never spread the virus to anyone else, and that I was very careful. I had always insisted on using condoms, which can reduce the risk of transmission. My selling point, however, was telling him that approximately one in four people has herpes and, statistically speaking, he undoubtedly had slept with someone who had herpes. He said he would know if he had been with someone who had herpes.

“How?” I asked.

He thought about that for a minute and then realized he might not know. In the end, instead of rejecting me, he chose to continue our relationship. What a relief. But after we had sex, he would always wash himself like a doctor scrubbing down for an operation. I could hardly blame him, but it wreaked havoc on my self-esteem. Since he was disease-free, he refused to wear condoms, instead choosing the scrub-down — something that would do nothing to prevent herpes transmission.

That relationship eventually came to an end, leaving me worried yet again about getting back in the dating game. Then, while surfing the Web for information on the latest herpes medication, I stumbled across a web site for people with herpes.

Finding Help and Support

There are dozens of web sites that provide online support and information for people with herpes. Many feature chat rooms, bulletin boards, treatment information, personal ads, and social groups around the world. A friend of mine had recently married a guy she met on the Web — proving that not every Internet date is a psycho — so I gave it a try.

I met dozens of electronic pen pals and eventually went on several dates. It was a relief not to worry about when to bring up my medical history, and to bond with a guy over asymptomatic shedding instead of having to explain it.

The whole experience made me more comfortable with the fact that I have herpes and gave me the confidence to begin dating again. It was as if I had just re-entered mainstream society. Not everyone with herpes has to date someone infected with the virus to find true love, but in my case, it worked.

Mr. Right Online

Eventually, I met a man online who lived only three miles from me. We discovered we had numerous mutual friends. Given the circumstances, it was surprising that we hooked up on the Web and not at a neighborhood barbecue.

Soon we will be married, and more than 100 family members and friends are invited to join our celebration. Most have no idea how we really met, but it’s not important. Herpes brought us together, but it’s the love, laughter, and good times that keep us close.

Ann Smith is a pseudonym for a journalist living in California.

This article is from the WebMD

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Dating and Herpes

June 4th, 2009

Re-Entering the Dating Scene

Now that you know you have genital herpes, you’re out of the dating game, right? Absolutely not. There’s no reason to stop looking for love and fun.

Genital herpes doesn’t detract from your many desirable qualities, which have drawn people to you in the past and will continue to make you a great catch.

Broaching the Topic of Genital Herpes

The first date after your diagnosis may seem a little strange, however. If you hope to be sexually intimate with your date at some point, you may feel like you’re keeping a nasty secret. If you are one to be candid with people, you’ll want to blurt it out. Don’t. There are some things you should reveal about yourself right away — for example, that you’re married, or that you’re just in town for the week — but some things are better left for the appropriate moment.

It’s up to you to decide the right time to tell your date that you have genital herpes. Follow two rules: First, don’t wait until after having sex. Second, don’t wait until you’re just about to have sex — in which case the attraction may be too strong for either of you to think rationally and act responsibly.

If in the past you tended to start a new relationship with sex, you now might want to change your approach. It might be better to break the news about your herpes to someone who has already grown attached to you. Kissing, cuddling, and fondling are safe, so you don’t have to tell before you do that. But use your best judgment as to how physically intimate you want to get before telling. One thing could lead to another, and you might find yourself in an awkward situation.

Dealing With Rejection

Anyone who dates should be prepared for rejection. The person you’re seeing may beat a hasty retreat when he or she finds out about your genital herpes. If you get the “I just want to be friends” talk after telling your sweetheart you have herpes, consider this: He or she may have already been looking for a way out, and herpes was as good an excuse as any. What’s more, anyone who disdains you or humiliates you for having herpes was never worth your while.

Keep dating, and you will find someone who wants to be with you regardless of your herpes status. There are certainly some who wouldn’t mind keeping the intimacy level just short of doing things that could transmit the virus. And of those people, it’s likely that at least one will come around, and say, “Hey, I understand there’s a risk, but I’m crazy about you, so I’m willing to take it.”

Depending on your dating style, you might look for another person who knows he or she has herpes, if only to avoid having to discuss it. If you already use dating services or personal ads, you can also use any of those specifically for people with genital herpes. A search on the Internet for “herpes dating” will turn up several.

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