English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

2006-07-04 06:59:57 · 22 answers · asked by dandelion86 2 in Health Dental

Thanks for your tips, everyone. Starlite is right, they are canker sores, not cold sores (or herpes!) I have gotten them ever since I was little and they come when I get stressed. I'm moving soon and the stress from that is what's doing it right now. I haven't yet found a fail-safe cure, but I will try these suggestions and I thank you all again!

2006-07-04 07:17:12 · update #1

22 answers

Start taking the supplement called "Lysene". It will cure them for now, (in 2-4 days time) and to prevent the recurrence of canker sores and also cold sores on or around your mouth and lips take at least one, usually 2, 500 mg tablets each morning. I take 1000 mg. each morning, and just don't get cold sores or canker sores anymore...at all! It's easy to find in the drugstore vitamin and supplement section, or ask the pharmacist to help you find them. Good luck!

2006-07-04 07:18:54 · answer #1 · answered by Pammy13 1 · 1 0

1

2016-09-20 00:31:02 · answer #2 · answered by Laverne 3 · 0 0

First of all, if they are inside your mouth, they are not "cold sores", they are more than likely canker sores, or aphthous (ulcers), the scientific term, whose cause is generally unknown, because different things bring them out in different people, and not everyone gets them. Unfortunately, the only treatments are palliative, meaning something that takes the pain away briefly but doesn't "cure" them. The only cure is time. They have to run their course, and that is usually 10 - 14 days, just like any minor injury to your body. Some palliative treatments are Orajel and Anbesol, if you want to try to get some temporary relief. One thing you can do while they are healing, in order to not exacerbate the pain is to not eat or drink anything with citric acid in it (citrus fruits and their juices), avoid chocolate, candy, and very salty foods.

2006-07-04 07:16:24 · answer #3 · answered by schnitzelbunk 2 · 0 0

The herpes simplex virus (HSV-1) causes cold sores/fever blisters. You could contract it just from drinking someone else's drink, used utensils, sharing lip balm, or kissing a person that is carrying herpes simplex virus. They are usually somewhat sensitive blisters that can show up in the vicinity of the lips, or perhaps even the inside of your mouth or nose, somewhere else on your face, and any place else on your body.

They could appear because of amplified stress, the common cold, fever, cold conditions, certain foods, or even an excessive amount of sunlight. The region can begin to tingle, itch, or burn, and after that a sore may turn up. The blister may dry out and produce a yellowish crusting. They could stick around from 7 to 2 weeks. An individual could try to hide the sore by using make-up, however this generally helps make it even worse.

To do away with cold sores, one may try covering them with a cold sore special product, use lip balm with SPF 15, use licorice extract, ingest echinacea, vitamins C and also E, and completely keeping away from coming in contact with the cold sore. By adopting a handful of lifestyle changes, it can be feasible to reduce cold sores and even stop them from happening again.

2014-06-03 12:21:28 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You can gargle with salt water to help with the inflammation. But what I find is better if somewhat yucky tasting is to apply a wet teabag to the area. The tannic acid in the tea bag actually does help heal the cold sore. If you don't like the idea of having a tea bag in your mouth, try gargling with warm plain tea. Just make a cup like usual and let it steep 5 minutes. When cool enough, gargle with it.

2006-07-04 07:04:57 · answer #5 · answered by Garfield 6 · 0 0

well salt water will help and so will listerine also to kill the pain
try some advil and some oragel i hope this can help if it was on the outside i would say use some carmex but the inside it might be a cancker use canker medisine will help as well
and if it is infected you can even put proxside in ur mouth and hold it in the area where the sore is i hope one of these suggestions help hunn

2006-07-04 07:07:54 · answer #6 · answered by brina 2 · 0 0

Luckily if they are on the inside of mouth it is not cold sores which is a form of herpes.
What you have (if they look white) are canker sores.

Oral jel works
Gargle with salt water!
Don't bite on
And no citrus

2006-07-04 07:06:12 · answer #7 · answered by STARLITE 4 · 0 0

Gargling with warm salt water every few hours is the best.
Line the bottom of your glass( l cup) with salt(tastes like the saltiness of the ocean) Really works since salt kills the bacteria/virus. I've also gargled with hydrogen peroxide.(Makes your mouth foam, like a mad dog, but whatever works and it whitens you teeth)
Salt is what the doctors tell you to use. Good luck. It hurts only for a little while and they'll be gone.

2006-07-04 07:14:21 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It's a virus...comes and goes with stress as you already know.

Buy yourself a bottle of Peroxyl rinse...very good for mouth injuries. Brings oxygen back to heal faster.

Good luck.

2006-07-04 07:53:58 · answer #9 · answered by LS 1 · 0 0

swosh saltwater in ur mouth 4 30 sec every 4 hours 4 2 days dats how i get ride of mine

2006-07-04 07:04:15 · answer #10 · answered by snax! 1 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers