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	<title>Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada &#187; cold sore OTC treatments</title>
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		<title>Cold Sore Oral &#8211; What Oral Cold Sores Are and Treatments for Them</title>
		<link>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-oral/</link>
		<comments>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-oral/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 31 Mar 2009 20:51:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Oral herpes (aka &#8220;cold sores&#8221;) is the most common form of herpes infection and is known as &#8220;herpes labialis&#8221;, which is the infection that occurs when the virus comes into contact with oral mucosa or abraded skin. Once you&#8217;ve contracted it you can never get rid of it&#8211;outbreaks decrease in frequency over time but once [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-oral/">Cold Sore Oral &#8211; What Oral Cold Sores Are and Treatments for Them</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/coldsoreoral.jpg" alt="cold sore oral - what they are and treatments for them" align="left" />Oral herpes (aka &#8220;cold sores&#8221;) is the most common form of herpes infection and is known as &#8220;herpes labialis&#8221;, which is the infection that occurs when the virus comes into contact with oral mucosa or abraded skin. Once you&#8217;ve contracted it you can never get rid of it&#8211;outbreaks decrease in frequency over time but once the outbreak is over the virus enters a remission period during which it &#8220;hibernates&#8221;, or remains dormant, inside the sensory nerve cells of your face (or whever the original site of infection is).</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">Oral Cold Sore Triggers</h3>
<p>When an outbreak occurs it typically lasts between 2 and 21 days, depending on a number of factors (after you read this it should never last much more than 24 hours for you: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/">Cold Sore Home Remedies &#8211; What I’ve Tried and What’s Worked</a>), including the state of your immune system, any vitamins and supplements you might be on, how you externally treat it, and any prescription anti-virals you may be taking for it. Outbreaks can almost always be linked back to some change in conditions that weakened your immune system for a period of time thereby allowing the virus to come out of remission and attack: excessive exposure to UV (sunlight), sudden temperature changes (i.e. cold weather, hence the name &#8220;cold sores&#8221;), other illnesses, poor diet and lack of exercise, and, more than any other, <strong>stress</strong>.</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">Spreading Oral Herpes &#8211; Did Grandma Infect You?</h3>
<p>You most likely got cold sores when you were a small child, and in this case the most likely way in which you received them was being kissed by a close relative who was infected with oral herpes and happened to be shedding the virus at the time (they may have had an active cold sore, but not necessarily as you can still shed the virus even while not displaying any symptoms of the disease).  Oral herpes is most often transmitted when there are visible sores on the person&#8217;s face, however the period immediately before a cold sore emerges is a stage during which the person is asymptomatically shedding the virus and is therefore capable of infecting other people even though there are no outward signs of the disease.</p>
<p>Although many people infected with HSV (Herpes Simplex Virus) develop typical visible symptoms such as lesions and sores, the majority of those infected with HSV (both HSV-1 and HSV-2)  either go undiagnosed or display no physical symptoms of infection (they&#8217;re asymptomatic) and in many cases the very first symptom a person will have of their own infection is the horizontal transmission of the virus to a sexual partner or the vertical transmission of the virus from a mother to a newborn at term in the form of neonatal herpes which can be very dangerous and is often lethal to the newborn.  (Source: <a href="http://www.bio-medicine.org/medicine-news/Experts-Insist-That-Neonatal-Herpes-Be-Reported-Regularly-4645-1/">Bio-Medicine.org</a>)</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">Prescription and OTC Treatments for Oral Cold Sores</h3>
<p>Prescription anti-viral medications for herpes work by interfering with viral replication, thereby slowing the replication rate of the virus and giving the immune system more of a chance to shut the virus down before it can cause problems. The three main prescription anti-virals are:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Acyclovir (Zovirax):</strong> The most popular and usually first-prescribed cold sore anti-viral medication, this will shorten the duration of the pain by up to 1 day, and can reduce the healing time required for your first (ever) outbreak of herpes by 1 to 2 days.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Famciclovir:</strong> This medication is occasionally used to treat the herpes virus that causes cold sores, as well as genital herpes (it acts on both the HSV-1 and HSV-2 strains), and studies have shown that it works as well as Acyclovir in the treatment of oral cold sore outbreaks. Possible side effects include itching, fever, headache, fatigue, nausea, or diarrhea.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Valacyclovir:</strong> Valacyclovir was approved by the FDA solely for the purpose of reducing cold sore duration in people who are 12 years of age or older, and it’s also been noted that Valacyclovir is absorbed much easier than the other available anti-viral medications such as Acyclovir.  Possible side effects include allergic reaction, headache, skin rash, insomnia, dizziness, and fatigue.</li>
</ul>
<p>(Source for oral anti-viral info: <a href="http://www.webmd.com/hw-popup/oral-antiviral-medications-for-prevention-and-treatment-of-cold-sores">WebMD</a>)</p>
<p>I&#8217;m sure many of you have heard of an OTC (over-the-counter) topical ointment drug called Abreva: Docosanol is an OTC topical anti-viral cream marketed by Avanir Pharmaceuticals under the brand name of Abreva&#8211;it was the first OTC anti-viral approved in the U.S. and Canada, its method of action is preventing HSV from fusing to cell membranes, thus preventing entry of the virus into the skin.  In my experience it is mildly effective on its own, but very effective if used in combination with a proper home treatment course like what I&#8217;ve found here:</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sore-oral">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sore-oral">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-oral/">Cold Sore Oral &#8211; What Oral Cold Sores Are and Treatments for Them</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Cold Sores Cause: What Causes Cold Sores?</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 24 Mar 2009 20:04:59 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/?p=136</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 can cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-cause/">Cold Sores Cause: What Causes Cold Sores?</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by a scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  There are various treatments for it, for more details on that check out: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cure-cold-sores-known-treatments-and-remedies/">Cure Cold Sores? Known Treatments and Remedies</a>. It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sores-cause">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sores-cause">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-cause/">Cold Sores Cause: What Causes Cold Sores?</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Cold Sore Nose: How To Treat A Cold Sore On Your Nose</title>
		<link>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-nose/</link>
		<comments>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-nose/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 20 Mar 2009 22:22:47 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/?p=126</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#60;&#8211;(See? Even pretty people get cold sores, and on their noses no less&#8230;) Right, so there&#8217;s a cold sore on your schnoz then, I take it?  Well, you&#8217;ve come to the right place&#8211;although the most common place that cold sores occur is on the lip and right around the mouth, the second most common location [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-nose/">Cold Sore Nose: How To Treat A Cold Sore On Your Nose</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/coldsorenose.jpg" alt="cold sore nose - how to treat a cold sore on your nose" width="272" height="320" align="left" /><em>&lt;&#8211;(See? Even pretty people get cold sores, and on their noses no less&#8230;</em>)</p>
<p>Right, so there&#8217;s a cold sore on your schnoz then, I take it?  Well, you&#8217;ve come to the right place&#8211;although the most common place that cold sores occur is on the lip and right around the mouth, the second most common location is the nose (hey, you can also get them on your EYE, so feel better cause it could be worse), but you treat them exactly the same way you would a normal cold sore on your lip, here&#8217;s what to do:</p>
<p>There&#8217;s a variety of prescription and OTC treatments that you can try (see here for more info: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cure-cold-sores-known-treatments-and-remedies/">Cure Cold Sores? Known Treatments and Remedies</a>), however myself and my friends have been long-time cold sore sufferers with over 100 years of combined experience with the disease and have tried almost every possible prescription, OTC, and home remedy treatment known to man, and we&#8217;ve found the available mainstream prescription and OTC treatments to be verylacking (at best they&#8217;ll shorten the duration of your outbreak by a day or so, that&#8217;s about it).  Over the years we&#8217;ve found a few various supplements and home remedies that actually work better than anything available from the pharmacy or drug store&#8230;</p>
<ul>
<li>Start taking lysine if you&#8217;re not already, not only will it shorten the duration of your outbreak if you&#8217;ve already got one but it&#8217;ll also, at lower doses, help prevent one from ever occuring in the first place.  Suggested dosage is 1000mg 3 times per day during an active outbreak and 500mg per day as a preventative measure.</li>
<li>Also, I&#8217;d recommend that you start on Vitamin C to help boost your immune system if you don&#8217;t already take it, and Vitamin B-12 has been showen to slow the replication of the herpes simplex virus that causes cold sores.</li>
<li>Apply lip balm (I like carmex for this) to your cold sore AFTER you wash it (you should be doing this once every few hours to keep it clean and dry) to keep it from spreading to the rest of your face or to other people (the wax in the balm seals the cold sore and keeps the liquid containing the virus from seeping out).</li>
<li>After you wash it apply some witch hazel or other alcohol (benzyl and isopropyl work as well) to the cold sore with a q-tip, you&#8217;ll be amazed at how much this will help.</li>
<li>Melting an ice cube on it when it gets particularly irritating can really help to reduce the itching, and we also think it helps slow the development of the cold sore and makes it heal faster.</li>
</ul>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sore-nose">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sore-nose">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sore-nose/">Cold Sore Nose: How To Treat A Cold Sore On Your Nose</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Cold Sores Treatment: I figured out what works and what doesn&#8217;t</title>
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		<comments>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-treatment/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2009 21:43:29 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/?p=111</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Ok, now I&#8217;ve been dealing with cold sores for a few years now, and between me and my friends who similarly suffer, we&#8217;ve found through good old-fashioned trial and error of just about everything out there (prescription, OTC, and what I call &#8220;kitchen concoctions&#8221; or home remedies) what works, what doesn&#8217;t, and what&#8217;s crap. Prescription [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-treatment/">Cold Sores Treatment: I figured out what works and what doesn&#8217;t</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/mortarandpestle.jpg" alt="cold sores treatment what works" width="250" height="250" align="left" />Ok, now I&#8217;ve been dealing with cold sores for a few years now, and between me and my friends who similarly suffer, we&#8217;ve found through good old-fashioned trial and error of just about everything out there (prescription, OTC, and what I call &#8220;kitchen concoctions&#8221; or home remedies) what works, what doesn&#8217;t, and what&#8217;s crap.</p>
<p>Prescription and OTC stuff <strong>can</strong> help to a small degree, but frankly I&#8217;ve found the home remedies to be more effective, plus theres nothing really out there as far as preventative measures go that&#8217;s prescription or OTC so if that&#8217;s what you want you&#8217;ll have to go the homemade route.  About the best the prescriptions and OTC stuff seem to be able to do is shorten the length of your outbreak by one, <strong>maybe</strong> two days if you&#8217;re lucky, that&#8217;s it.</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve found that if you feel the tingling sensation of an oncoming outbreak that you usually get where the cold sore&#8217;s going to emerge a couple days before it actually does (people who have had cold sores before a few times know what I&#8217;m talking about), then 80-90% of the time you can actually prevent that cold sore from ever emerging if you take appropriate action <strong>fast</strong>, here&#8217;s what to do (do each one of these steps once every 2 hours):</p>
<p>1. Wash the affected area with a wash cloth and soap, being sure to throw the wash cloth in the laundry and use a new one each time since the old one will be soaked in active herpes simplex 1 virus.</p>
<p>2. Take about 10 minutes to melt an ice cube on the affected spot, this numbs any pain and slows down the virus&#8217;s metabolism.</p>
<p>3. Apply either witch hazel or benzyl alcohol (benzyl alcohol is rumored to be more effective but more difficult to find) with a q-tip.</p>
<p>I&#8217;d also recommend you take L-Lysine at 1000mg 3 times per day for about the next 5-7 days along with plenty of Vitamin C (boosts your immune system) and Vitamin B-12 (has been shown to help with cold sores).  For more information on using lysine on cold sores check this out: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/lysine-cold-sores/">Lysine: Cold Sores Treatment? Dosage and How-To…</a> See here for more detailed information on home remedies and treatment options:</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sores-treatment">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sores-treatment">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-treatment/">Cold Sores Treatment: I figured out what works and what doesn&#8217;t</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Cure Cold Sores? Known Treatments and Remedies</title>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 16 Mar 2009 21:08:12 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[There is currently no known cure for cold sores (although there may be one soon, see the Time Magazine article at the bottom of this post), and once you&#8217;ve got it the herpes simplex virus stays in your body for the rest of your life, hiding out in the nerve cells in your face (check [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cure-cold-sores-known-treatments-and-remedies/">Cure Cold Sores? Known Treatments and Remedies</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/curecoldsore.jpg" alt="cure cold sore" width="160" height="160" align="left" />There is currently no known cure for cold sores (although there may be one soon, see the Time Magazine article at the bottom of this post), and once you&#8217;ve got it the herpes simplex virus stays in your body for the rest of your life, hiding out in the nerve cells in your face (check this for more detailed information about the virus and how it causes cold sores: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/what-is-a-cold-sore/">What Is A Cold Sore? Basics of What A Cold Sore Is</a>).  Having personally suffered for years and tried every possible prescription, OTC (over-the-counter), and home remedy kitchen concoction known to man, I&#8217;ve discovered what works and what doesn&#8217;t through simple, old-fashioned trial-and-error.  Various prescription anti-virals such as Acyclovir and Valcyclovir are typically prescribed once you&#8217;ve already got an active outbreak and are only supposed to reduce the length of the outbreak by 1 or 2 days at best (which is precisely what they do, in my experience), and possibly reduce the pain and discomfort by a small amount.  Prescription creams do the same thing, essentially, only not as well (yup, pretty much).  Abreva is ok, I will say that it does definitely help with the pain and discomfort, sort of a numbing sensation, but actually (and I know this sounds stupidly obvious) I&#8217;ve personally found that ice, of all things, works better at this: ice the cold sore once every two hours and that will go further to reduce the pain and inflammation than anything else I&#8217;ve tried (just melt an ice cube on it over about a ten minute period).</p>
<p>I know people will tend to be searching for treatment information for cold sores once they&#8217;ve already got one, but I&#8217;d like to go over a couple really effective preventative measures that will keep you from having to deal with an active outbreak 90% of the time when you would&#8217;ve otherwise had one.  Take lysine, not only during an outbreak but prior to one too: 1000mg 3 times a day during an outbreak, and 500mg daily as a preventative measure (go here for more information on l-lysine: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/lysine-cold-sores/">Lysine: Cold Sores Treatment? Dosage and How-To…</a>), also Vitamin C can help (not only with cold sores, but keeping you healthy in general as you probably already know) because it boosts your immune system and it&#8217;s been shown that cold sore outbreaks almost always occur when the immune system gets temporarily depressed for some reason (this is why illnesses like the flu or strep will often trigger an outbreak).  Also, once you feel the tingle of an oncoming cold sore (most people will feel and recognize this a couple days before the cold sore emerges), immediately start washing the affected area and hitting it with witch hazel applied via a q-tip once every 2 hours, this will often stop it cold before it has a chance to emerge (some people say that benzyl alcohol works better, but good luck finding some, it&#8217;s not prescription just kinda obscure).  For more detailed information on home remedies I highly recommend you see: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-remedies-personal-experiences-with-20-different-remedies/">Cold Sores Remedies &#8211; Personal Experiences with 20 Different Remedies</a>.</p>
<p>It seems that researchers are closing in on the HSV-1 virus (the virus that typically causes cold sores, although the other strain, HSV-2, <strong>can</strong> cause oral infections):</p>
<blockquote><p>Until now, research has generally concentrated on keeping HSV1 inactive — and preventing cold sores from ever showing up. But the Duke researchers took the opposite tack: figuring out precisely how to switch the virus from latency to its active stage. That&#8217;s important, says lead author Dr. Bryan Cullen, professor of molecular genetics and microbiology at Duke, &#8220;because unless you activate the virus, you can&#8217;t kill it.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>Go here to read the full Time article: <a href="http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1819739,00.html">http://www.time.com/time/health/article/0,8599,1819739,00.html</a></p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cure-cold-sores">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cure-cold-sores">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cure-cold-sores-known-treatments-and-remedies/">Cure Cold Sores? Known Treatments and Remedies</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Cold Sores Remedies &#8211; Personal Experiences with 20 Different Remedies</title>
		<link>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-remedies-personal-experiences-with-20-different-remedies/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sun, 01 Mar 2009 22:16:22 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/?p=52</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Here&#8217;s a list of 20 various remedies that myself and my friends have tried and found effective to one degree or another, plus our personal comments and opinions on each one.  I really hope that you not only find this list useful but actually go ahead and try some of these yourself and post your [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-remedies-personal-experiences-with-20-different-remedies/">Cold Sores Remedies &#8211; Personal Experiences with 20 Different Remedies</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/congvo/213842176/"><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/girls.jpg" alt="cold sores remedies" width="240" height="180" align="left" /></a>Here&#8217;s a list of 20 various remedies that myself and my friends have tried and found effective to one degree or another, plus our personal comments and opinions on each one.  I really hope that you not only find this list useful but actually go ahead and try some of these yourself and post your results in the comments&#8211;also, if you&#8217;ve got a remedy for cold sores that you&#8217;d like to contribute, believe me you&#8217;re more than welcome to post that as well, and thank you so much for your contribution!</p>
<ol>
<li>I woke up and my cold sore was already open, but this is what I did to have it gone by the next morning&#8230;I melted an entire ice cube on my sore, even tho it&#8217;s a little painful at first..Then dab the sore to dry it and put rubbing alcohol on immediately after with a Q-tip..I did this once every 30 min. to an hour, and by the next morning, you couldn&#8217;t see a thing!!!</li>
<li><img src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/lysine.jpg" alt="cold sores lysine" align="left" />When you first fell a cold sore coming take Lysine Tablets, 2 tablets 3 times a day. Starts fighting off the cold sore before it forms. Also put the Lysine topical cream on. Helps it from getting really big and helps it heal up really fast!</li>
<p></br><br /></br></p>
<li>When you feel it starting to come out take a Q-tip and soak an end in mouthwash.Next apply the soaked end to it and hold for several minutes.I use this all the time and find it works best.</li>
<li>Dab Tea Tree Oil on it several times a day. Works very good!!</li>
<li><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/aloevera.jpg" alt="cold sore aloe vera" width="112" height="160" align="left" />Aloe Vera &#8211; This home remedy for cold sores will work if you your cold sore does blister on you. Take a leaf from an aloe vera plant and rub the liquid from it onto your cold sore blister. It may sound strange, but it gives results. Do this a few times a day and at night. Within a day or two your cold sore will be gone. I know people who will grow aloe plants in their home just for this very reason.</li>
<li>Vitamin B &#8211; Taking vitamin B supplements has been shown to help get rid of a cold sore. Vitamin B-12 works especially well. [I also personally think that Vitamin C helps as well because it boosts your immune system, which I mention here: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/get-rid-of-cold-sore-in-24-hours-at-home/">Get Rid Of Cold Sore in 24 Hours At Home</a>]</li>
<li>Coconut Oil &#8211; Take 100ml of coconut oil, 2ml of dettol, and 3ml or carbolic acid and mix them together. Apply twice daily directly on your cold sore. Some people say this formula also works on boils and mosquito bites.</li>
<li> My Doctor suggested this and it works like a charm. Take a tube of chap stick PLAIN flavored , break open a capsule of benadryl and sprinkle the powder on the top of the chap stick , rub on the cold sore so as to make a paste of balm and benadryl powder. First day will dry it up&#8230;and within 3 days no sign of a cold sore at all!</li>
<li>Rubbing aloe, lemon balm extract, or tea bags to cold sores is also known to lessen their size and help reduce pain. Drinking less coffee is another home remedy for cold sores. It is believed that coffee can be a catalyst in the formation of cold sores. It is recommended that people who are susceptible to cold sores cut back on their coffee intake.</li>
<li>There are also some foods that you do not want to eat when experiencing a cold sore. These foods will only make the problem worse. Avoid eating chocolate, oatmeal, seeds, peas, nuts, and any wheat products. [this sounds fishy--kinda like the old wives tale about chocolate making acne worse, which has been disproved many times over, anyone know anything about this one?]</li>
<li>Another home remedy is salt. Regular powdered salt can be applied directly to the affected area of the skin using the forefinger. Make sure to slightly wet the finger prior to application of salt. Slightly press on the sores using the finger with salt. Follow on with Aloe Vera cream or skin lubricant for a more soothing action.</li>
<li>Applying Witch Hazel on sores will give you some relief. Dip your moist index finger in powdered common salt and press the sore for 30 seconds using this index finger.</li>
<li>Petroleum Jelly will keep the sore area and skin around it from cracking.</li>
<li>Eucalyptus Oils, like the kind you put under your nose and on your chest with a cold, may speed healing and reduce pain.</li>
<li> Doctors today are recommending to patients that they take plenty of vitamins and supplements. Vitamin C is one of the most popular because it has proven to promote healthy skin, prevent viral infections, such as common colds, and so on. Vitamin C and E are recommended also, because the two have an antioxidant to help fight viruses. Vitamins can be used to improve various body functions. Vitamin B-5 for example is one of the most recommended supplements for controlling cold sores. Vitamin B-5 is helpful for reducing stress. Since medical experts associate the cause of these sores to stress, it is logical that the vitamin can help by reducing the stress.</li>
<li>If I keep the area covered with a heavy, greasy type ointment&#8211;either Carmex or DCT Blistex&#8211;it tends to almost prevent an imminent outbreak&#8230;</li>
<li>Taking ibuprofen (such as Advil or Motrin) or acetaminophen (such as Tylenol) to reduce pain. Do not give aspirin to anyone younger than 20 because of its link to Reye&#8217;s syndrome.</li>
<li>Using a mouth rinse that has baking soda to soothe a sore mouth.</li>
<li>Avoiding foods that contain acid (such as citrus fruits and tomatoes).</li>
<li>Using nonprescription ointments (such as Orajel or Anbesol) that numb sore areas in the mouth or on the lips.</li>
</ol>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sores-remedies">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sores-remedies">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/03/cold-sores-remedies-personal-experiences-with-20-different-remedies/">Cold Sores Remedies &#8211; Personal Experiences with 20 Different Remedies</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Lip Cold Sore &#8211; Top 5 Treatments (prescription, OTC, and home remedy)</title>
		<link>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/lip-cold-sore/</link>
		<comments>http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/lip-cold-sore/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 28 Feb 2009 02:16:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[abreva]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Acyclovir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore anti-virals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore creams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore lips]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore ointments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore on lip]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore OTC treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore prescription treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sores lip]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Famciclovir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[herpes simplex virus]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[how to treat cold sore lip]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[lip cold sore]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[over-the-counter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[topical treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[treat cold sore on lip]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/?p=43</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[So you&#8217;ve got a cold sore on your lip, eh? Well, that sucks.  Sorry, I know that wasn&#8217;t helpful, but I&#8217;m used to it enough at this point such that that&#8217;s precisely what I think when I look in the mirror in the morning and see that I&#8217;ve got one developing: &#8220;well, that sucks&#8230;&#8221; Ok, [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/lip-cold-sore/">Lip Cold Sore &#8211; Top 5 Treatments (prescription, OTC, and home remedy)</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/131741875_6a83242323_m.jpg" alt="lip cold sore" width="240" height="180" align="left" />So you&#8217;ve got a cold sore on your lip, eh? Well, that sucks.  Sorry, I know that wasn&#8217;t helpful, but I&#8217;m used to it enough at this point such that that&#8217;s precisely what I think when I look in the mirror in the morning and see that I&#8217;ve got one developing: &#8220;well, that sucks&#8230;&#8221;</p>
<p>Ok, but now I really am going to help you, here&#8217;s a list of the top 5 methods I&#8217;ve found to treat cold sores over the years.  This is compiled between my own experience, that of my friends, and other cold sore sufferers whose knowledge and cures I have solicited online and in person.</p>
<p><img src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/acyclovir.jpg" alt="cold sore oral anti-viral treatments, Acyclovir" align="left" /><strong>1. Oral Anti-Virals</strong> &#8211; These are only somewhat effective, although they&#8217;re a favorite of doctors because they&#8217;re prescription only which means you have to pay for a doctor&#8217;s visit to get them.  They&#8217;ve only been shown to, <strong>at best</strong>, reduce the length of a cold sore outbreak by a few hours to 1 or <strong>maybe</strong> 2 days at most, AND they only do any good if you take them as soon as you first feel the tingling of an impending outbreak, they don&#8217;t do anything if the cold sore has already started to develop.  The 3 main prescription oral anti-viral medications are Acyclovir (pictured on left), Famciclovir, and Valacyclovir.  Go here and scroll down to &#8220;Cold Sore Blister Treatment&#8221; for more detailed information on these types of treatments: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/cold-sore-blister/">Cold Sore Blister: What is it, and How To Treat It?</a>.</p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/abreva.jpg" alt="topical cold sore creams abreva" width="150" height="240" align="left" /><strong>2. Topical Creams (prescription and non-prescription)</strong> &#8211; These are even worse (it gets better in a bit, I promise), the effectiveness of these various topical ointments are actually still in dispute by the scientific literature available on them, but it seems that the best you can hope for is a reduction in the length of the outbreak by a few hours to a day or so.  The upside of these creams is that they can be applied and still be effective even once the cold sore is fully developed, unlike with the previously mentioned oral anti-virals that must be taken at the first sign of an impending outbreak. The two prescription-only creams that I know of are Penciclovir and Acyclovir cream, which claim to reduce the length of an outbreak by, possibly, 1 to 2 days. Over-the-counter creams such as Tetracaine cream (Viractin) and Lidocaine (Zilactin-L) both are designed to reduce the pain and itching of the cold sores only, they do not claim to reduce the length of the outbreak.  A recent OTC cream made available in the U.S. is Docosanol 10% (aka Abreva), and is the first and currently only non-prescription topical medication that has proven to potentially shorten the duration of a cold sore outbreak.</p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/iceberg.jpg" alt="ice cold sore" width="240" height="161" align="left" /><strong>3. Ice (yes, ice).</strong> This is the first of my best three home remedies I&#8217;m going to mention here. Simply applying ice <strong>as soon as you feel the tingling of an impending cold sore</strong> directly to the spot where it feels like it&#8217;s going to emerge can significanly reduce the severity and duration of the outbreak&#8211;it might not stop it altogether, but on a cold sore &#8220;Richter Scale&#8221; of 1 to 10 it can take what would&#8217;ve been a 7 or 8 and stop it from ever going past a 3 or a 4 in severity.</p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/cow.jpg" alt="milk on cold sore" width="160" height="107" align="left" /><strong>4. Cold Milk (Moooooo!):</strong> Take a cotton ball, soak it in cold milk, and apply it directly to the site of the impending cold sore once every two hours for 5 minutes at a time, it will help relieve pain and shorten the duration of the cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>5. Benzyl Alcohol:</strong> Take some Benzyl Alcohol and soak a Q-tip with it, apply once every two hours to the site where you feel the tingling of a cold sore that&#8217;s about to emerge (experienced cold sore sufferers know what this is and can generally tell when they&#8217;re about to get one before it happens), this can actually <strong>prevent</strong> the cold sore from ever emerging in the first place (this is a real life-saver when it works), which is pretty awesome, huh?  I know I&#8217;ve covered several home remedies here and which one you should use is just dependent on which one works best for you, I can&#8217;t predict that, and it simply requires that you experiment with several different ones until you find one that you like.  Next, I highly recommend you have a look at this, it&#8217;s the best cold sore treatment that I have personally ever tried:</p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=lip-cold-sore">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=lip-cold-sore">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/lip-cold-sore/">Lip Cold Sore &#8211; Top 5 Treatments (prescription, OTC, and home remedy)</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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		<title>Cold Sore Blister: What is it, and how to treat it?</title>
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		<pubDate>Fri, 27 Feb 2009 06:15:12 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Articles]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Acyclovir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[child cold sores]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[children cold sores]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore anti-virals]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore blister]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore blisters]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore creams]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore ointments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore OTC treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore prescription treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cold sore treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Famciclovir]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[over-the-counter]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[topical treatments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Valacyclovir]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[A cold sore blister is the outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus&#8211;most likely the Type 1 strain, aka HSV-1, although 1 in 6 cases of oral herpes involve the HSV-2 strain, which is the one typically associated with genital herpes, see What Is A Cold Sore? for more info. They normally [...]<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/cold-sore-blister/">Cold Sore Blister: What is it, and how to treat it?</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/287203793_7ac0dc1b54_m.jpg" alt="cold sore blister, shame, such a pretty girl" width="240" height="160" align="left" />A cold sore blister is the outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus&#8211;most likely the Type 1 strain, aka HSV-1, although 1 in 6 cases of oral herpes involve the HSV-2 strain, which is the one typically associated with genital herpes, see <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/what-is-a-cold-sore/">What Is A Cold Sore?</a> for more info.</p>
<p>They normally occur on or around the outside of the mouth, most frequently on the edge of the lips.  These blisters usually start out with minor itching, irritation, and tingling on the spot where the cold sore will emerge a few days before the actual outbreak.  Often, if you notice this and realize an outbreak is about to occur, you can take preventative action that will usually stop the cold sore from ever emerging before it has a chance to&#8211;this is done through some simple over-the-counter treatments such as what I cover here: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/">Cold Sores Home Remedies</a>. I&#8217;ve found the most effective to be the application of witch hazel by q-tip every 2 hours to the spot where you think the cold sore will emerge, if you want a quick tip to try out the next time you feel an outbreak coming on.</p>
<h3>Cold Sore Blister Treatment</h3>
<p>There is no permanent cure for cold sores nor, once you&#8217;ve been infected with the Herpes Simplex Virus, can you get rid of it. If you&#8217;re having<strong> </strong>an outbreak, then there are anti-viral medications (prescription only) that can reduce the severity and healing time of the outbreak <strong>ONLY</strong> if they are taken as soon as the itching and irritation develops&#8211;they will have almost no effect if taken after the cold sore has developed.  Oral anti-virals can also be taken every day to prevent cold sores for those who tend to have frequent outbreaks.  Those medications and their effects are:</p>
<ul>
<li><strong>Acyclovir (Zovirax):</strong> This will shorten the duration of the pain by up to 1 day, and can reduce the healing time required for your first (ever) outbreak of herpes by 1 to 2 days.</li>
</ul>
<ul>
<li><strong>Famciclovir:</strong> This medication is sometimes used to treat the herpes virus that causes cold sores as well as genital herpes (it acts on both the HSV-1 and HSV-2 strains, in other words), and studies have shown that it can work as well as Acyclovir in treating oral herpes outbreaks. Possible side effects include itching, fever, headache, fatigue, nausea, or diarrhea.</li>
<li><strong>Valacyclovir:</strong> Valacyclovir was approved by the FDA specifically to reduce cold sore duration in people who are at least 12 years of age or older, and it&#8217;s also been noted that Valacyclovir is absorbed much easier than other anti-viral medications such as Acyclovir.  Possible side effects include 		  allergic reaction, headache, skin rash,  		  insomnia, dizziness, and 		  fatigue.</li>
</ul>
<p>(Source for oral anti-viral info: <a href="http://www.webmd.com/hw-popup/oral-antiviral-medications-for-prevention-and-treatment-of-cold-sores">WebMD</a>)</p>
<p>There are also topical ointments (creams applied to the skin) that are both prescription and over-the-counter which you can use.  These can be used at the first sign of an impending outbreak of cold sores and they can also be applied to a cold sore once it&#8217;s already developed, although so far it seems that the best these creams can offer (both prescription and over-the-counter) is to shorten the duration of the cold sore by a few hours or a day at best, and right now even those results are in question pending further study.  For more information on topical treatments for cold sore blisters and a full list of all prescription and non-prescription ointments go here: <a href="http://www.webmd.com/hw-popup/topical-creams-for-treatment-of-cold-sores">WebMD Page on Topical Creams for Cold Sore Blisters</a>.</p>
<p><strong>*Note: the first outbreak of cold sores can make eating and drinking so painful that small children may need to be encouraged to drink water to prevent dehydration.</strong></p>
<h3 style="text-align: center;">How the cold sore virus replicates and how to stop it</h3>
<p>This is going to go into a bit of detail, there&#8217;s going to be a bit of science and some medical terms, but if you&#8217;ll stick with me til the end you&#8217;ll really have an excellent understanding of how this nasty little virus works and how a few simple tweaks in what you eat (most importantly: what to <strong>stop</strong> eating) and maybe a special supplement you probably haven&#8217;t heard of before (don&#8217;t worry, I&#8217;m not selling it and it&#8217;s not expensive) can not only eliminate your cold sore in a day or two but also prevent them from every coming back again.  Let&#8217;s get started&#8230;</p>
<p><strong>What causes a cold sore?</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/hsv1scan.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="320" height="256" align="left" />A cold sore is an outward symptom of an outbreak of the Herpes Simplex Virus (usually Type 1, aka &#8220;HSV-1&#8243;, although HSV-2 <strong>can</strong> cause oral herpes) usually due to a decreased in immune function, a very common cause of which is exposure to cold weather hence the name &#8220;cold sore&#8221;. To the left you will see the culprit: that&#8217;s HSV-1 magnified 169,000 times by scanning electron microscope&#8211;growl at it or flip it the bird if it makes you feel better <img src='http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>The herpes virus remains dormant in the sensory nerve cells of your face until an outbreak, and no, sorry, there&#8217;s no cure: once you&#8217;ve been infected, you&#8217;ve got it for life.  It&#8217;s almost always going to be the type 1 strain (HSV-1) of herpes that causes oral cold sores, however cases of HSV-2 causing them have been documented, so it&#8217;s possible, although rare.  However, 1 in 6 cases of genital herpes are causes by HSV-1 (genital herpes is usually associated with HSV-2), so that&#8217;s somewhat more likely, although the old axiom that if it&#8217;s above the waist it&#8217;s HSV-1 and if it&#8217;s below the waist it&#8217;s HSV-2 does still generally hold true.</p>
<p><strong>How Did I Originally Get Infected? Or: WHY GRANDMA WHY?!?!</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/grandmakiss.jpg" alt="cold sores cause" width="148" height="160" align="left" />Studies have shown that, the vast majority of the time, oral herpes is transmitted most commonly in someone&#8217;s youth when they are kissed by a relative who&#8217;s infected and suffering from an active cold sore outbreak&#8211;yeah, that sucks.  This is especially likely if you started getting cold sores when you were a small child, which would mean that you were infected when you were very young and therefore most likely acquired it from close contact with an infected relative suffering from an active outbreak.  If you acquired it later in life then something else is probably the cause, most likely that you acquired it from an intimate partner through physical contact i.e. kissing someone with a cold sore.</p>
<p><strong>Cold Sore Treatments, Medications, and Remedies</strong></p>
<p><img style="border: 5px solid white;" src="http://i2.photobucket.com/albums/y24/marketwizard93c/cold%20sores/homeremedy.jpg" alt="cold sore treatments" width="319" height="212" align="left" />There&#8217;s a great variety of treatments that myself and my friends have tried over the years: most of us originally went the prescription-combined-with-OTC (over-the-counter) route where we were prescribed something like Acyclovir or Valacyclovir and then used an OTC cream like Abreva.  Over the years we&#8217;ve found (myself included) that the best those can do is to shave 1 maybe 2 days off of an outbreak, and that&#8217;s about it.  We&#8217;ve found, through trial-and-error between us over the years, that there are more effective remedies you can put together in your kitchen.  Not only that, but there are preventative measures that you can take which will often prevent a cold sore outbreak altogether from happening again, <strong>ever</strong>, from supplements like l-lysine and Vitamin B-12 to minor but hugely effective little diet changes like avoiding vinegar at certain times because it lowers your blood pH levels and creates an environment much more favorable to the virus replicating and wreaking havoc on your face.</p>
<p><strong>pH Levels, Oxygen, and Stopping the Virus Cold in Its Tracks</strong></p>
<p>The Herpes Simplex Type I virus that causes your cold sores has a very narrow pH range that its environment <em>must</em> be within for it to be able to live and reproduce (by the way, pH is just how acidic or basic something is&#8211;acids have a low pH and bases, such as lye, have a high pH) your body&#8217;s own pH range can easily sway into this territory from time to time due to a number of factors, the most common causes of which are stress, decreased immune function, certain foods, lack of sleep, and excess sunlight&#8211;now, where have you seen these factors mentioned before? Probably in an article you read about the most common triggers for cold sores, right?  Even if you haven&#8217;t read about it I&#8217;m sure you already know it anyway because you almost certainly would have noticed it: your cold sores tend to occur when you&#8217;re stressed out, when your immune system is down (this most commonly occurs when you&#8217;re ill or when it&#8217;s very cold out), when your diet changes (usually in an unhealthy way, such as the addition of junk food you weren&#8217;t eating before), when you&#8217;re not getting enough sleep, etc., right?</p>
<p>The reason for this is that when you allow these things to happen to you, you&#8217;re creating an environment that is the most favorable for the virus to reproduce and live in (it&#8217;s when the virus starts suddenly massively reproducing that you get cold sores) by altering your normal pH level for the worse and making it very difficult for your immune system to keep the virus at bay, which it does <em>most</em> of the time, which is why you don&#8217;t have cold sores <em>most</em> of the time&#8211;your immune system is doing it&#8217;s job, it&#8217;s only when you make it difficult for it to do its job that problems start to pop up.  So, essentially, if you can get your pH level back to normal then the cold sores vanish (this is a bit of an oversimplification, but I just don&#8217;t have the room here to explain the whole process).  Plus, if you just follow a couple simple guidelines concerning diet and cheap, over-the-counter supplements, you can possibly prevent them from ever coming back, or at least make them very rare (most people who follow the program described below will go several years between cold sores, which is usually a <strong>huge</strong> improvement for them). Now, how do you do that?</p>
<p>My friend Derek, after a couple years of experimentation (primarily on himself!  he suffered horribly from cold sores for years) and some consultation with several doctors and herbal specialists, came up with a program he shared with me a couple years back that took some things we already knew about how to get rid of cold sores (taking l-lysine, avoiding stress and too much sunlight, yada yada) to <strong>a whole other level</strong>, I mean I was just completely blown away, what he originally showed me was a multi-page, super-detailed program he came up with that utilized a few small (as in they won&#8217;t inconvenience you) adjustments in diet that make a big difference primarily involving what not to eat, along with a combination of several herbal supplements (one is l-lysine, but the dosage is different from what you&#8217;d normally take since you&#8217;re combining it with other supplements) including a new one I&#8217;d never heard of called &#8220;cat&#8217;s claw&#8221; that came from some weird tree bark in the Peruvian rain forest, plus a couple others that, when combined, have a very powerful and immediate effect on your body&#8217;s pH level and can quickly bring the Herpes virus to a dead halt, but they have to be combined just right in the correct dosages, plus your diet has to be right because if you&#8217;re eating any of the several things that can throw off your pH level then it might not work.  He&#8217;s currently put together <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sore-blister">a fantastic 84-page report you can get here</a> (it&#8217;s pretty easy reading, you can get through it in a couple hours, no worries) that I highly recommend you check out, just listen to what the guy has to say, he knows what he&#8217;s doing believe me.  I wish I could just give the whole thing to you here, but it&#8217;s 84 pages long and there&#8217;s just no way I can fit that into a blog post, plus he won&#8217;t let me due to copyright issues (I asked already, in fact I had to be careful about how much I gave away to you here about his method!).</p>
<p>I just can&#8217;t tell you how much of a difference this has made in my life, I used to suffer from cold sores nearly every other month, it was horrible: cold outside? cold sore. hot outside? cold sore. job-related stress? cold sore. the flu? cold sore bonus, yay! have trouble sleeping? cold sore.  I haven&#8217;t had one in nearly 3 1/2 years now, and it all started when I first got that e-mail from Derek detailing something he spent years testing and researching and months writing the rough draft.  At the time I had a terrible outbreak, two on my mouth and one just on the edge of my nostril, and they were gone in 48 hours, never to return.  I follow his simple guidelines about not eating certain foods when I&#8217;m especially susceptible to cold sores (I&#8217;m stressed, not getting enough sleep, feeling a little under the weather, etc.) and I always take my daily supplements (3 little pills, which are good for you and have multiple other benefits, plus they&#8217;re cheap as dirt from my local drug store).  If I feel a cold sore coming on, that familiar little tingle, I up the dosage to the level he recommends for when you actually have a cold sore (quite a bit higher than the normal dosage you use to prevent them) and then the tingle goes away and I never see a cold sore pop up, works every time.  Again, just for your own benefit I&#8217;d recommend you check out his site and see what he has to say, it&#8217;ll take 5 minutes, that&#8217;s it: <a href="http://ec91c9r8yxk4nugr1cu3-6qkag.hop.clickbank.net/?tid=cold-sore-blister">go here to learn how to eliminate cold sores in just a day or two and keep them from coming back ever again</a>.</p>
<p>Cheers,</p>
<p>Lizzy</p>
<p><a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca/index.php/2009/02/cold-sore-blister/">Cold Sore Blister: What is it, and how to treat it?</a> is a post from: <a href="http://coldsoreshomeremedies.ca">Cold Sores Home Remedies from Canada</a></p>
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