1dentist.com over 700 pages of original dental content

    GuatemalaCity.1dentist.com

 HOME  |  DENTAL PHOTOS |  DENTAL ARTICLES  |  SCHEDULE AN APPOINTMENT  

Search Articles


Editorials
    Emails to the Editor
The LifeSmile Program
    Dental Fear - Phobia
    Sugar and Floss
    Toothpaste tubes
    General Dentists and Specialists
Cosmetic Dentistry
    Post Op - Bonding
    Smile Makeover
Tooth Bleaching - Teeth Whitening
    Post Op - Bleaching
Periodontics Treats Bad Breath, Swollen &/or Bleeding Gums
    PMS, Pregnancy and your gums
    Mouthwashes
    Root Planing & Scaling Treats Halitosis and Bleeding & Swollen Gums
    Gingivectomy, gum surgery
    Osseous Surgery, gum
Orthodontics & Braces:  What You Should Know
    Ortho v. Non-Ortho
    Caring for Your Braces
Learn About Endodontics &  Root Canal Therapy
    Post Op - Endo
    Apicoectomy
Oral Surgery
    Wisdom Teeth
    Dental Implants - Tooth Implants
    Intramucosal Implants
    Post Op - Surgery
Prosthodontics - click below
    Kaitlyn Loop vs. Lingual Button in Cosmetic Dentistry
    Patent:  Prefabricated Dental Inlay Forms
Occlusion, bite
    TMJ - TMD
    Ice Cream, Coffee and Nuts
Nutrition & Hydration in Dentistry
Oral Medicine - click below
    Canker Sores, aphthous ulcers
    Cold Sores, herpes 1, fever & sun blisters
    Oral Sex & Disease
    Microbial Flora Contamination in Toothpaste
Finances in Dentistry
    Tax Deductions for dental expenses
    Wall Street Research on Dentistry
Dental School 101
    Teeth...and People
    Greeting the Patient
    Seating the Patient
    Listen to Complaint
    Records
    Diagnosis
    Treatment Planning
    Case Presentation
    Treatment
    Reevaluation
DENTAL HEALTH EDUCATION CAMP REPORT
Plan to Improve Dental School Education
The Faculty Practice
Links
Our practice is located in . Click below to find a local dentist in another City or State:

Email This Page    Link to This Page


Cold Sores, herpes 1, fever & sun blisters

Cold Sores = Herpes I = Fever Blisters = Sun Blisters

A lot of patients confuse the terminology for cold sores and canker sores.  They may use many other words such as:  fever blisters, sun blisters, herpes labialis, herpes type I, and apthous ulcers without understanding the difference.  This section discusses cold sores; canker sores are discussed in the preceding section.

Cold sores are Herpes type I (one).  The other terms:  fever blisters, sun blisters and Herpes labialis (lips) all mean the same thing, Herpes.  Patients will occasionally present to my office with an established Herpes I lesion on their lip and refer to it as a 'cold sore' or 'fever blister' and yet deny that it is Herpes.  They are wrong. 

Herpes is a defined as a sexually transmitted disease (STD) though it is also possible for anyone, including children, to innocently contract it through contact with someone who is actively infected.  Herpes is contagious when the lesion is visible; it most commonly appears on the lips though it can also be hidden inside the mouth on the pink gum near the teeth.  It usually appears as small, discrete white dots that coalesce over several days into one larger, painful lesion.  Sharing food with parents, friends or classmates or kissing a relative hello are common means of disease transmission.  Therefore do not share food or kiss anyone when a lesion is actively present!  The usual duration of an untreated Herpes lesion is seven to ten days.  Herpes type II (two) is an STD that occurs on the genitals.

Herpes of the eye (Ocular Herpes) is caused by the herpes simplex virus, which more frequently appears on the lip. This infection can produce a painful sore on the eyelid or surface of the eye that causes inflammation of the cornea, the transparent tissue that covers the front of the eye.

An estimated 400,000 Americans have had some form of ocular herpes and they have up to a 50 percent chance of having a recurrence weeks or years later. Each year, nearly 50,000 new and recurring cases are diagnosed in the United States, with the more serious form of it accounting for about 25 percent of these cases.

The more severe form of ocular herpes causes the body's immune system to attack and destroy an inner layer of the cornea. A corneal transplant might then be necessary to prevent possible vision loss or blindness.

Treatment:  There is no cure for Herpes though current medication prescribed by a dentist or doctor can substantially reduce the severity of an outbreak.  Sunblock on the lips can also help prevent an outbreak.  The prescription medication is worth obtaining.

To see comparative photographs click on "Dental Photos" at the top of this page and then click on "Herpes" in the left margin. Hundreds of photographs are in this section.

This material is presented so that people will understand that a herpes infection is significant and that they do not want to be responsible for passing it on to someone else.  Patients need to be diagnosed and treated by their dentist, ophthalmologist and/or doctor, which is outside the scope of the information presented in this website.


Otto Franz Rehwoldt Castaneda, D.D.S.
10 CALLE 2-45 ZONA 14 OF. 1102 CLINICAS BELLA AURORA
Guatemala City, Guatemala
www.ceprosi.net
(502)-2363-5565
(502)-2367-3505







©2001 - 2008 Dr. Jeffrey Dorfman
About 1dentist, LLC
Terms and conditions of use

Ads by 1dentist.com
New Dental Invention
Read about our patented "Tooth-Colored Prefabricated Dental Inlays for Fillings."
Ads by 1dentist.com
Tenta Corp
We design & build beautiful dental & medical offices in NYC metro area.
Now Hiring
Our NYC office is now hiring College Grad pre-Dental Interns.