I’m a 28 yo male. I have a painless red sore on the tip of my
penisCancer - penis
Curvature of the penis
Penis care (uncircumcised)
Penis pain. It does not look blistered or pus-filled. It has a red base with a slightly raised red interior(kind of like a tiny, squat mountain range). The whole thing has a glazed look to it. It developed 9-12 days ago. It is perhaps a third the size of a nickel. It appears to have shrunk a
littleLittle noses decongestant
Little tummys in the last 24 hours, though overall it hasn’t really changed appearance that much. I last had
sexBuccal smear
Causes of sexual dysfunction
Child abuse - sexual
Delayed ejaculation
Erection problems
Female sexual dysfunction
Inhibited sexual desire
Orgasmic dysfunction
Puberty and adolescence
Rape
Safe sex on Sept 2 (almost 3 months before sore appeared) and used a
condomCondoms
Female condoms.
Background:
A few weeks back I developed genital warts. My urologist proscribed
podofiloxPodofilox topical and I started treating them on Nov 20. The
firstFirst progesterone mc10
First progesterone mc5
First-progesterone vgs 100
First-progesterone vgs 200
First-progesterone vgs 25
First-progesterone vgs 400
First-progesterone vgs 50
First-testosterone
First-testosterone mc week I was excessive – heavily targeting the individual warts but also making sure I got it on the surrounding skin. The warts were all on the foreskin, near the top. The warts have responded pretty well to the treatment.
The sore developed in my second treatment week. Initially, it was just redness on the penis head – no apparent lesions or bumps – more or less corresponding to the area where the treated foreskin would roll onto the penis head. The redness would heal a little but then seem to push a little westwards. Where the sore now is, is directly above the area where I put on podofilox most on the foreskin, though it took a day or two for the redness to appear there and maybe a day more for it to take on the raised, bump appearance.
A few days (four or five) after that I started feeling itchy over small areas of my body and this developed into an outright, larger rash. There was some rash on the soles of my feet too, and some spots on my tongue. A few days after this I developed flu symptoms.
I went to a dermatologist who didn’t really think there was a chance of it being syphilis. He said the rash was too generalized to be sure, but he guessed it was eczema. He said the sore on my penis did not look like herpes but he wanted me to get tested anyway (blood test). In the last 24 hours the rash and flu symptoms have really healed up (though not totally). The sore also appears to have shrunk a little bit in this time frame.
Sexual history:
Active since 18. I’ve had vaginal intercourse with 12-15 women, for an aggregate of about 50 times total. 4 of these times were unprotected, each with a different woman, the last time a year ago (I’ve had protected anal sex a few times). I’ve also received unprotected male oral sex numerous times, rough guess 30-50, though not in the last six months, I think.
What are the chances of the sore being herpetic? Given the time lag in appearance since the last time I had sex, if it’s herpes it must be an old infection only now showing for the first time. What range of time would a herpes sore last for in that scenario? I'm presently at 9-12 days (I think 12, but can't be certain). Does this put me out of range? Also, just how risky was my prior sexual behavior?
Thanks. This is a great site, an invaluable resource.
Thanks.
There's not that much urgency. Wait until Monday and visit your local health department. Any place you could find open on Sunday (emergency room, urgent care clinic) is not likely to be staffed by people who know much about syphilis.
Most dermatologists are pretty well trained in STD and certainly should know the routes of syphilis transmission. By itself, that doesn't need you need to change doctors. But an STD clinic or other provider confirms syphilis, make sure you let the dermatologist know about it.
HHH, MD
HHH, MD
Thanks for all the great advice.
HHH, MD