Genital Herpes and Oral Herpes Treatments

 

Genital Herpes and Oral Herpes Treatments



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Rating:Excellent I truly appreciate the ease in ordering products from Forces of Nature. The shipping time is excellent and the products arrive well protected. The best part is that the products work! I have tried every medication on the market with no results and I love the fact that H-Balm is all natural. Thank you FON, you have a customer for life! DP in Iowa (H-Balm treatment user)

What people say about H-Balm

Howdy!,,, from Port Alberni, B.C. Canada!!! I just wanted to let you know that I have been dealing with herpes for a few years, tried lots of things to no avail. Stummbled onto your web sight, thought I'd give your H-balm a try.That was about 3 months ago, and so far , not a single indication of an outbreak.The kicker is,, I have even tried to "trigger" one with coffee,chocolate, popcorn while being under plenty of stress in my life,and still not... read more (Keith B, H-Balm treatment user)

When I first discovered that I had herpes, I was devastated. I joined a Yahoo Support Group to help me to cope with my discovery. My M.D. did not offer much information, but simply started me on an antiviral medication. However, I had to try several different medications, several different dosages-and to my utter disappointment, nothing seemed to work for too long. I was having constant outbreaks. In fact, it seemed like I was only having one wee... read more (April, H-Balm treatment user)

Rating: Excellent Price Rating:OK Shipping Options Rating:Excellent Delivery Rating:Excellent Ease of Purchase Rating:Excellent Customer Service Rating:Excellent This company has great products and an outstanding customer service department. (H-Balm treatment user)

What people say about H-Balm

I was skeptical about Forces of Nature, but, curious enough to give it a try. I am now on my second bottle and so far am quite satisfied with the results. It does stop the affected areas from breaking out when applied. When I applied it to an irritated area, the redness disappeared almost immediately. I told my doctor about it and she said nothing can cure herpes which is not what the company said it would do. It promised relief and less outbreak... read more (Anonymous, H-Balm treatment user)

FINALLY! I have been suffering with almost weekly small outbreaks for months since diagnosed with genital herpes. I have been on valtrex 500 twice a day and it did not keep outbreaks at bay. I cannot beleive the releif this product provided for me. For the first time I am outbreak free. I especially encountered problems if i shaved my bikini line with outbreaks occuring as hair grew in. It spread to my leg... this cleared it up almost within 24 h... read more (Anonymous, H-Balm treatment user)

Forces of Nature is a SUPER online company. Love the website, very informative and easy to use. Prices are great, delivery in a day or two, and best of all, they produce soothing, quality product that REALLY WORKS! I have shoped with them at least 5 times and will never buy therapeutic oils from anyone else. Thanks Forces of Nature! (Lorrie, H-Balm treatment user)

What people say about H-Balm

The H-Balm products have been a godsend. I am a 55 year old female who was diagnosed with genital herpes 18 months ago. From the outset, I suffered chronic and severe outbreaks, including almost daily prodomal pain. This continued even though I was taking an oral suppressant. Approximately two months ago I tried H-Balm and experienced immediate results. The sores healed within 24 hours of the first application and the prodomal pain disappeared. I... read more (H-Balm treatment user)

I was reluctant to buy H-Balm because I figured it was another gimick for another company to make money. But I became desperate the valtrex I was on was not doing much. I ordered this product, have been using it for two years and couldn't be happier. It works amazingly well. If I see a herpe about to form, I use a cotton swab and in hours it is healed. The scent is nice too. Definitely try this product. It is worth every penny and then some. (Sarah, H-Balm treatment user)

What people say about H-Balm

"The H-Balm arrived yesterday and, yes, I must admit, it really works pretty damn fast…. less than 24 hours, about three applications, and a really big open sore area which kept getting bigger was almost totally healed….what a huge difference…. thanks for such a great product. Gary gccc44@adelphia.net (H-Balm treatment user)

What people say about H-Balm

I've tried many things, grew resistant to medication like acyclovir and L-Lysine only works preventatively (within hours of when you think onset might begin). H-Balm expedites the herpes cycle so that instead of four or five days you're dealing with this annoyance for three days, two if you put H-Balm on right at the onset (and that's key). (Anonymous, H-Balm treatment user)

What people say about H-Balm


Used with permission from www.herpes.org

If one looks back into the medical literature, many different treatment recommendations can be found for HI going back many decades. Prior to the arrival of effective anti-viral compounds, treatment options included such diverse concepts as topical application of deoxyglucose or the surgical removal of infected areas. The former ultimately was proved to be ineffective, and the latter resulted in individuals having viral recurrences along the surgical scar. Neither, of course, are recommended by anyone today.

100% Organic Treatment Proven Effective for Genital Herpes and Oral Herpes:

Use H-Balm to Treat Genital Herpes and Oral Herpes

The message, though, is that desperate people who are suffering will often jump at offers of "cures" from various medical and quasi-medical solutions which have not been substantially examined by peer-reviewed research. The results of these "solutions" in fact may include increased suffering by the victim and a worsened public health outcome both for the victim and the victim’s consorts.

The author respectfully requests that the reader take a few minutes and review this paper. The reader will find a broad, readable discussion about the current recommended treatments for HI. After reading this discussion hopefully the appropriate treatment(s) for the condition will become apparent.

Herpes is a virus that infects the nervous system, modifying the DNA of the nerve cells supplying the skin through which the virus entered. The infection is permanent. Most patients suffer from recurrences that may vary in frequency from once in a lifetime to non-stop infections that never go away. The average rate of recurrences is about four times per year, plus or minus one. Recurrences typically take about a week or so to heal. This means that the average untreated person with HI spends about a month out of the year with lesions.

Another fact about having an infected nerve cell is that the cell may be making viral particles at any time, perhaps all the time. The signs of recurrence on the skin apparently are related to the production of a large amount of viral particles. Probably when the nerve cell makes fewer viral particles, the skin may not show signs. Put another way, the nerve cell may be actively producing viral particles even though the skin has no rash or redness. This condition is called "asymptomatic viral shedding". The general consensus is that any person with HI who does not have any symptoms currently in fact is shedding virus about 4% of the time. Put another way, an asymptomatic person with HI has a 1 in 25 chance of being contagious at any given time. This is true assuming of course that the person is not on medications (see below). Current research in female patients puts the asymptomatic viral shedding rate in genital Herpes infections (GHI) even higher in one published study.

The problem with HI, therefore, is that a piece of viral DNA resides permanently in a nerve cell . This viral DNA is periodically copied and turned into viral particles that may generate contagious viral shedding or cause a contagious rash. It is through interfering with the process of the formation of viral particles where the opportunity comes to "treat" the problem and prevent the spread of these particles to non-infected patients.

The mainstay of treatment is in the identification of the illness and forming a rational plan to manage the condition. Evidence exists that patients "auto-inoculate" themselves. In this condition, the patient makes him/herself worse, either through the spreading of the infection on the skin to adjacent skin areas OR actual spread from nerve cell to nerve cell in the area where the nerve cell lives beside the spinal cord (called the ganglion). The former occurs when the untreated rash is allowed to remain undrained and uncleaned. The latter probably occurs at various time, including when the patient has symptoms and does not take medication to terminate the symptoms.

The first point of care then is that a person with symptoms needs a diagnosis. Any person with an oral or genital/rectal rash, especially associated with blisters, pain, or pain referred into the buttocks or legs, should be seen and evaluated by a physician or other trained medical professional skilled in the evaluation and management of HI. A viral culture should be taken of a lesion at some point in the person’s medical history to attempt to identify the organism. The patient’s consort should be counseled and possibly evaluated along with the patient.

Blood tests to establish diagnosis of HI are not always very helpful. The only REAL way to document that a patient has suddenly developed HI from a blood test is to draw blood quickly after the onset of symptoms and to document that the patient’s blood test is negative. Then a couple of weeks later a second blood test is drawn to document that the patient has suddenly developed antibody against the virus. Even then, these tests are not completely reliable and often do not give clear and concise answers.

Smart living prevents infections. It is clear from various studies that educated patients and educated consorts can drastically reduce the transmission of infections. While it has been shown in earlier studies that consorts do often become infected, it is also clear that the use of anti-viral medications (see below) decreases both recurrence frequency and viral shedding. Medication combined with smart living and use of condoms can drastically lower disease transmission. This is not a guarantee, of course, but it does offer some reassurance that in the symptom-free patient who is taking medications as directed and using a latex condom, the risk of transmission is very, very low, possibly as low as one chance in a thousand per exposure.

The combination of smart living with anti-viral medications (in patients for whom these medications work) can potentially create a vast public health improvement affecting literally millions of individuals.

Anti-Viral Medications

About twenty years ago it was noticed that certain viral infections could be treated through the use of chemicals that are part of DNA. Specifically, modified "bases" could be applied topically (on the outside of the body) in the setting of virus infections in the eye, for example, that could improve the infection. Soon to follow was the use of a modified "guanosine", called acyclovir, as a cream to be applied onto HI lesions, which produced some modest improvement in symptoms. The rash would clear up a couple of days quicker than if no cream were used. Recurrence frequency was not affected.

About 15 years ago acyclovir became available for oral use. Studies rapidly appeared indicating that the medication was not only safe but highly effective. When taken as directed, patients’ symptoms of both acute infections and recurrences rapidly improved. When the medication was taken ONLY for recurrences, little influence was found upon recurrence frequency.

About 10 years ago it was found that acyclovir, when taken on a daily basis, could decrease recurrence frequency to about once per year. Also, it was found that when a recurrence DID occur, it was milder and of shorter duration. Further, recent studies have indicated that asymptomatic viral shedding was reduced as much as 80% in patients who took acyclovir regularly.

How does Acyclovir work? Its actual effect in killing virus has not been definitely proved. Acyclovir has several actions in the test tube. It inhibits the enzymes that copy viral DNA, and it also inhibits the replication of virus. Also, again in the test tube, acyclovir is taken up into the growing chains of viral DNA, causing termination of these chains. Acyclovir seems to be "selectively" taken up by infected cells. Acyclovir is much less toxic for normal cells because less is drug is taken up, less is converted to active form, and normal cell enzymes are less sensitive to the chemical (to paraphrase the PDR online).

The problem with acyclovir is this: It doesn't stay in the body very long, and when taken by mouth, its blood levels are fairly low. A modification of the acyclovir molecule, called Valacyclovir (sold under the trade-name Valtrex), gives much higher blood levels.

The use of any anti-infective chemical is associated with increasing the occurrence of resistant organisms. Certainly this is also true in the case of acyclovir for HI. Resistant organisms have occurred, in some cases requiring multiple anti-viral medications to control symptoms. Interestingly, one study suggested that allowing break periods in the administration of acyclovir allowed sensitivity to the drug to return. This technique is speculative and not currently recommended.

That being said, however, HI resistance to acyclovir and Valtrex is relatively rare. Almost all patients can control symptoms through Smart Living concepts along with medication. The medication is very well tolerated and has few side effects.

How much medication is enough? For acute episodes the recommended dosage of acyclovir is 200 mg taken five times per day for approximately ten days, possibly longer. This author’s clinical experience indicates that 400 mg taken two or three times daily is probably equally effective.

Patients who seem to have regular recurrences in spite of Smart Living and/or in spite of episodic therapy are candidates for chronic suppressive therapy. In this treatment method, the patient will take a daily dosage of acyclovir or Valtrex either once or twice daily. The dosage per pill will be 200 mg to 400 mg for acyclovir and 500 mg to 1000 mg for Valtrex. According to a recent discussion in the New England Journal of Medicine, the minimal dosage that will control symptoms is the dosage that should be taken. Given this treatment method, recurrences in almost all patients can be reduced to once or twice per year, and the recurrences that occur will be milder. One should also remember that asymptomatic shedding will be substantially reduced on chronic suppressive therapy, which should reduce how contagious a person with GHI will be. (This author is not aware of work indicating a decrease in viral shedding with OHI and would appreciate any feedback if the reader knows of any such published research).

Famvir, another modified form of acyclovir, theoretically, would seem to offer some advantage for therapy because of the increased presence of the medication within the cell, due to the manner in which the medication is phosphorylated. One would think that a medication which is more rapidly absorbed AND which persists longer inside the target area would in fact give a substantially improved effect. At this point, this does not seem to be the case.

How should a patient actually take the medication when on suppressive therapy? This author suggests placing the dosage alongside a patient’s daily vitamins: Vitamins C, E, B complex, and beta carotene are suggested. One might also consider taking dosages of atragalus, echinacea, and possibly red algae. These three have had various articles suggesting immune system benefits that could possibly reduce recurrence frequency. In this manner the medication will not be forgotten.

What should a person on suppressive therapy do if an outbreak occurs? First, the patient should not panic. This happens, and this almost always does not mean that the patient is developing viral resistance. It simply means, apparently, that whatever trigger in the nerve cell is at work to initiate viral DNA transcription and replication is suddenly overwhelming the amount of Valtrex or acyclovir that is on board. One need only increase the dose of Valtrex to 1000 mg daily (or 500 mg twice daily) or acyclovir to probably 400 mg three times daily (or, 200 mg five times daily), and the recurrence should begin to subside relatively soon, anywhere from one to a few days. The recurrence while on medication is typically milder and of shorter duration. After the lesions have formed dry scabs and the skin redness has subsided, the patient can usually go back to the original suppressive dosage once or twice daily.

A brief word would be in order about the development of viral resistance. A number of strains of HSV which are resistant to acyclovir, Valtrex, and Famvir have been discovered. In the overall population resistant strains are relatively rare, though in immunocompromised patients, such as those in the later stages of HIV infection, resistant strains are somewhat more common.

Where does viral resistance come from, given that the viral DNA information is apparently incorporated into human DNA? Resistance, apparently, comes when virus particles are released from infected cells that no longer have the enzyme necessary to activate acyclovir. The virus particles, interestingly, have to convert the acyclovir to a chemical that kills themselves. Apparently they get smart and learn how to do without the enzyme that converts acyclovir into something that kills the virus. Again, the development of a recurrence while on suppressive therapy does NOT mean that the patient is harboring a resistant strain. Consistent inability to suppress acute infections with acyclovir is worrisome, however, and should be further evaluated. Tests for viral resistance ARE available but are generally found in centers that do research on such subjects.

Let us leave the discussion of Valtrex and acyclovir on a positive note. Utilizing once or twice daily suppressive therapy, almost all victims of this illness can dramatically decrease the incidence and severity of recurrences. Also, the patients and their consorts can take comfort in knowing that the incidence of aymptomatic viral shedding is likely reduced as well. This does not decrease the need to take appropriate precautions (see Smart Living). However, at least the risk of transmission is apparently substantially reduced. Also, regular use of the medication has been shown in the literature to CONTINUE to reduce the incidence of recurrences through the first three years of therapy, as mentioned above, a benefit that has also been shown to persist for at least two or three more years of therapy.

Medical therapy for GHI and to some degree OHI can dramatically improve the enjoyment of disease-free intervals, at the same time reducing the risk of shedding the virus and probably making disease transmission less likely. This dramatic improvement of symptoms through the use of a now inexpensive and essentially non-toxic chemical, when used as directed along with appropriate Smart Living techniques, promises to offer a major improvement of life enjoyment for the Herpes sufferer and his/her consort and of the public health as well for many years to come.

Non-prescription Therapies for Herpes Infections

A number of herbal products have become available for the treatment of herpes infections over the last few years. Each of these products that I list has direct, documented anti-herpes virus activity as found in the MedLine by my direct research. I shall be providing this documentation on this website in due course. Olive leaf extract, red marine algae, prunella vulgaris, and the extract of the cactus opuntia streptacantha have all been shown to have anti-viral properties against Herpes Simplex. Many manufacturers are available for these products, but a new website, www.herpesexpert.com, is a one-stop-shopping site for these products. The reader can talk to Dr. Ian Pardoe at that site if any questions arise.

Interestingly, one recent paper indicated that the application of red wine to the lesion (topically, not consumed) actually will assist in aborting an outbreak.

I found another interesting series of papers recently on the use of Tagamet (generically it is called "cimetidine") for the treatment of herpes infections in animals. It turns out that cimetidine has "immunomodulation" effects, meaning specifically that it depresses the activity of "T suppressor cells" which may be inhibiting the body's natural cellular mediated immunity which is known to fight off recurrences. The interested reader can to go www.medportal.com and perform a search on "herpes" and "cimetidine" to read these articles. The reader might print these off and take them to the private physician for discussion. I do NOT recommend this therapy to anyone until more research is performed in this area. Someone who is immunosupressed already, such as with HIV or cancer, would want to particularly avoid such a treatment.

Peter Klapper’s "essential oils" for herpes infections have antiviral properties according to scientific research. He can be reached at www.forces-of-nature.net and www.fonoils.com. Reports to me indicate that these oils have been quite effective at aborting new outbreaks. Contact him for more information.

Future Medical Therapies for Herpes Infections

New antiviral medications are constantly being researched. A recent Japanese paper reviewed research on dozens of new chemicals which suppress Herpes virus formation, including resistant viruses. Periodically new chemicals are produced that offer new approaches to treating recurrent disease. Some chemicals, like cidofovir, can be toxic to certain human cells, such as the kidneys, though are very effective at controlling herpes virus infection. The reader must remember, though, that it takes many years from the time of the identification of a chemical that seems to work until the release of the drug on the market that has been exhaustively determined to be "safe and effective".

The reader should review the adjacent paper on the current status and the future of herpes vaccines. At some future time the use of the body’s immune system MAY in fact be the most "safe and effective" method to control infection. Literally hundreds of published articles concerning many human and animal studies indicate that already methods exist to modestly, and sometimes substantially, alter the course of disease and offer prevention in some cases. However, the safety and efficacy of such vaccines have not been clearly proved in the world’s literature at this time.

This author is excited about the concepts of the "disabled infectious single cycle" vaccines and the DNA vaccine technology that will offer, in the next few years, exciting prospects for confronting both GHI and OHI and both controlling the spread of these diseases as well as controlling symptoms in infected patients.

Another exciting area is in that of an evolving therapy for women that may both treat women as well as possibly offer protection for intimate partners. This falls into the area of "Intravaginal Release" of medications. European research is ongoing in this area, and we may soon see a new route of prevention and treatment available in this manner.

Interestingly, the cells that are infected can be localized. This is obviously true because of the skin location where recurrences occur. The infected cells transmit viral particles to the skin. This means that the skin identifies the infected cells. This WOULD be a conduit directly to the infected neurons, were there to be some medication that would permanently affect the involved cells and render then non-infectious or even dormant. A risk would be generated, of course, in killing the infected cells. These nerve cells are involved with sensation to the skin and possibly important reflex arcs and other important nervous system functions. Clearly though this concept remains an area for future treatment considerations.

100% Organic Treatment Proven Effective for Genital Herpes and Oral Herpes:

Use H-Balm to Treat Genital Herpes and Oral Herpes




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