that study was only on hsv2 , not hsv1.
if you and a partner both have hsv1 genitally, very unlikely you'd transmit it to a partner's oral area if they didn't already have it there ( anywhere from 1/4 - 2/3's of folks with hsv1 genitally also have it orally ).
Grace,
Thanks again fro the info The Hepes Handbook suggested something different. I took this directly from there:
"A study completed in the summer of 2002 evaluated whether antivi-
ral therapy, taken daily, could reduce the risk of transmission of HSV 2 in
healthy, heterosexual adults over the age of 18, from an infected partner
to an uninfected one. The person with herpes took either valacyclcovir
500 mg daily or placebo. The study followed the couples for a total
of 8 months, drawing the blood of the uninfected partner monthly to
look for infection. The study found that the taking of valacyclovir daily
reduced transmission by 48% over placebo (or sugar pill)."
Your thoughts on this?
Also I have a question regarding trasmiting that is NOT discussed. Both partners have HSV2 it was said to be rare to trasmit it to a new locations. But what about HSV1, if we both have it Genitally, could I give it to my partner in the mouth by oral sex?
we don't have any studies to show if daily suppressive therapy helps to reduce transmission of hsv1 to a partner.
Grace,
Will surpressive therapy decrease the likleyhood of transmitting the virus?
just google it and it comes right up :)
no i didn't where is it located?
at this point, I'd just err on the side of caution and repeat your hsv2 igg at 4 months post encounter just to make sure you didn't test too early.
no, you did not have a herpes WB test done.
correct, hsv1 genitally reoccurs less often and sheds less in general. did you get a chance to read the free herpes handbook yet?