Early stage of condyloma and herpes

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summary

Herpes zoster is caused by varicella and condyloma herpesvirus. The virus enters the human body through the respiratory tract mucous membrane, spreads through the blood line, and appears chickenpox on the skin. However, most people do not appear chickenpox after infection, which is a recessive infection and become carriers of the virus. Let's learn more about the early stage of condyloma and herpes.

Early stage of condyloma and herpes

Symptom 1: there are many symptoms of herpes, most people will have a rash, herpes is symptomatic in the early stage, herpes is an inflammatory, recurrent sexually transmitted disease caused by herpes simplex virus invasion of genital skin and mucous membrane. The early symptoms of the disease are mass blisters in the vulva, local burning or tingling sensation, ulceration or shallow ulcer after about 6 days, conscious pain.

Symptom 2: you can judge by some symptoms. On average, about 4-5 days after herpes HSV infection, the affected part of vulva first has a burning sensation. Immediately there are groups of papules, which can be one or more clusters, followed by blisters. After a few days, it developed into pustules, which broke into erosion or shallow ulcers, felt pain, and finally scabbed and healed. The course of disease was about 2-3 weeks.

Symptoms three: herpes is serious, will appear skin lesions, skin lesions in male foreskin, glans, coronal sulcus and penis, occasionally seen in the urethral orifice; male homosexuality can occur anorectal HSV-2 infection, its incidence rate is second only to gonorrhea proctitis, the clinical presentation is anorectal pain, constipation, secretions increase and urgency, anal herpes can have herpes ulceration. In sigmoidoscopy, congestion, bleeding and ulcer were common in the lower rectal mucosa.

matters needing attention

Here I would like to give you a warm reminder: anyone who has obvious contact and has had contact at home should take preventive measures. Except for the situation at home, it is often difficult to determine the intimacy of other types of contact. It is helpful to refer to the guidelines formulated by the American Academy of pediatrics or the Centers for Disease Control and prevention.