If there is no redness or rash, "my penis is on fire! No sores but it feels terrible" sounds like a psychological symptom. I see no reason for you to be suspicious your partner has HSV-2. If her blood test is positive, it still won't explain your symptoms. Your symptoms were not an appropriate reason for her to even be tested. Please tell her that I'm sure she hasnt' given you herpes and that she can expect a negative test result.
Whatever is going on, there is nothing at all in your story that suggests you have caught HSV-2, which cannot cause pain without first causing overt blisters/sores. Continue to work with your doctor about yoru symptoms if they persist.
The last HSV 2 test was done 6 days post exposure. I fear with my symptoms now that it is certainly type 2 and the blood work is just too new. . My penis is painful and burning. No sores but lots of pain and shocking.
Sorry to write on the wrong board but it was your guidance that I sought.
I think so. I basically said I had sex with a girl and took famvir right after sex and you said something about studies on animals showed it helped.
Bottom line is I'm waiting to see if my girlfriend is in fact type 2 positive. She's sitting right here now and my penis is on fire! No sores but it feels terrible. The pain for days was centered on testicles and urethra. Now it's bouncing around. My penis is hurting :(. I'm so scared. I barely touched her without protection.
I find no other threads with your username. Did you have another one at that time?
Dr Handsfield,
I was referring to our conversation a year ago in this question. Thanks for your time.
Welcome to the forum. However, it should be in the STD forum, not this one. Therefore my comments are brief and there won't be an opportunity for follow-up comments.
Based on your numerous comments in the herpes forum and other MedHelp forums, it seems you are quite fixated on HSV-2. All evidence is that you don't have it, and I disagree with your doctor's comment about a "trend" in your blood test result that will eventually become positive. Either s/he doesn't understand HSV testing or you misuderstood. Your result is weakly positive for HSV-1, which of course is consistent with your prior diagnosis of genital herpes due to HSV-1. However, your HSV-2 result has been consistently negative. As long as the result is below the postive cut-off value of 0.9, there is no meaning in varying numbers on repeat tests. If the very same blood specimen were tested 10 times, it would give 10 different numbers -- meaning nothing at all. It's in the nature of the test and has absolute nothing to do with having small or varying amounts of antibody to HSV-2.
On top of that, it is clear that something other than HSV-1 explains the genital symptoms you describe. No herpes outbreak can last only a day, and there is no such thing as pain due to herpes without an outbreak. And genital HSV-1 recurrences rarely are more frequent than once or twice a year -- and most people have only 1 or two recurrent oubreaks, then none for the rest of their lives. You may indeed have a genital HSV-1 infection, I can't say. But it isn't the cause of the symptoms you have described.
So for sure you don't have HSV-2 -- and maybe not genital herpes due to HSV-1 either. I hope you find this good news. That's how I intend it.
HHH, MD