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The cause of cold sores or fever blisters is attributed to (HSV-1) or herpes simplex virus type 1. The virus creates sores which usually form on the lips but can appear on the face or even on the tongue. They develop because the dormant Herpes virus in the body is stimulated by trigger events. These trigger events activate the virus into an outbreak causing an excruciatingly painful lesion which takes about 10 -14 days to naturally heal.
Herpes Simplex Virus-1
The cold sore cause is the HSV-1 Virus, or herpes simplex virus type 1, which invades the skin at childhood or adolescence and results in a fever, sore throat, or sore mouth. This is known as the primary herpes infection - the symptoms of the first infection can include:
·  fever,
·  headache,
·  nausea,
·  vomiting,
·  painful swelling
·  open sores on the gums and inside the cheeks
·  occasionally a painful throat infection that is often mistaken for "strep throat"
These symptoms usually begin approximately a week after exposure to someone with HSV-1.
Since the initial cold sore cause is often mistaken for other viral or bacterial infections, it is usually not diagnosed as an HSV-1 infection. After the primary infection recedes, the virus stays in the nerve roots near the original inflamed area. The virus enters the nerve cells, travels up the nerve until it finds a ganglion to rest in and remains in a dormant stage.
Throughout many people's lives this virus flares up periodically. A cold sore outbreak begins when the virus multiplies and travels through the nerve cells to the skin, forming as fever blisters on or near the lips. This HSV-1 virus is highly contagious and can be spread by human contact and through saliva.
Trigger Events
The term 'cold sore' or 'fever blister' comes from the fact that these sores appear frequently after a person has had a cold or a fever which can trigger an outbreak. Cold sores are generally triggered when a person's resistance is lowered. These situations include:
·  stress
·  stretching the mouth (as in dental work)
·  hormonal changes
·  cold weather
·  wind
·  fatigue
·  exposure to the sun
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The main cold sore cause is the Herpes Simplex Virus which is lying dormant in many people's bodies. After the virus is in the body, it usually needs a trigger factor to stimulate the virus to activity. Not every cold sore is a result of one of these triggers. In fact, in a lot of cases, it is not exactly known why a particular person develops a cold sore.
Scientists are still trying to understand exactly how the factors that can trigger outbreaks interact with the immune system and the virus to prompt a recurrent episode.
However, we do know that there are vitamins and supplements that can suppress the reproduction of the virus and thus prevent cold sore outbreaks or shorten the episode. It may even be possible to stop cold sores before they start.