Skip to main content
🇮🇪 Irish Registered Doctors  ·  Available 7 Days a Week
Guide · Skin conditions

Cold Sores (Herpes Simplex) in Ireland — Patient Guide

Cold sores are caused by HSV-1, carried by most adults. Most cases are mild — but here is what to know about treatment, recurrence, and rare complications.

IMC-registered Online DoctorsSame-day appointmentsVideo or phoneAll of Ireland
Online doctor consultation in Ireland — Cold Sores Herpes Simplex Ireland
Image: Tima Miroshnichenko on Pexels source

What are cold sores?

Cold sores (medical name herpes labialis) are a recurrent viral infection of the lips and surrounding skin caused by herpes simplex virus type 1 (HSV-1). Most adults in Ireland — around 60-80% — carry HSV-1, though many never have visible outbreaks. The virus stays dormant in nerve cells and reactivates intermittently, producing the characteristic cluster of blisters.

Typical course

Per NICE CKS, a typical outbreak progresses:

  • Tingling/burning (prodrome): 12-24 hours before any visible lesion — the best time to start treatment
  • Blisters: small fluid-filled vesicles cluster on or around the lip
  • Weeping/ulcer phase: blisters burst
  • Crusting: yellow-brown scab forms
  • Healing: 7-10 days total without scarring in most cases

First-ever outbreaks may be more severe — with fever, swollen glands, and widespread mouth ulcers (primary herpetic gingivostomatitis). Subsequent recurrences are usually milder.

Common triggers

  • Sun exposure (UV light) — a major trigger; sun-protection on lips helps prevent recurrence
  • Other illness, particularly with fever
  • Stress, fatigue, lack of sleep
  • Menstruation
  • Local trauma — dental work, lip injury, even kissing if skin is split
  • Immunosuppression — illness or medications

Treatment options

Per NICE:

  • Topical aciclovir cream — applied at the first sign of tingling, 5 times a day for 5-10 days. Most effective when started very early; modest benefit if started after blisters appear. Over-the-counter in Irish pharmacies
  • Oral antivirals (aciclovir, valaciclovir, famciclovir) — for severe outbreaks, frequent recurrence (6+ per year), or immunocompromised patients. Prescription-only
  • Suppressive antiviral therapy — continuous low-dose oral antiviral for very frequent recurrences. Usually after specialist review
  • Symptomatic relief — paracetamol or ibuprofen for pain; barrier creams (petroleum jelly) protect crusts; soft cool foods
  • Avoid topical corticosteroids on cold sores — they worsen viral spread

Prevention and reducing spread

  • Daily SPF 30+ lip balm — UV is a major trigger
  • Hand hygiene around active sores
  • Don't share lip products, towels, cutlery, drinks during outbreaks
  • Avoid touching eyes after touching cold sores
  • Avoid kissing or oral sex during active outbreaks
  • Don't pick at scabs — let them heal naturally

When to seek urgent care

Most cold sores are managed at home or with Online Doctor support. Seek urgent care for any of:

  • Cold sore near the eye or any eye symptoms (redness, pain, vision change) — risk of herpes keratitis, which can threaten sight
  • Widespread painful blisters over the face or body
  • Cold sore in someone with eczema (risk of eczema herpeticum)
  • Severe outbreak with high fever and feeling generally unwell
  • Immunocompromised patients (cancer treatment, transplant, HIV, certain medications)
  • Newborn baby contact concerns

Online Doctor consultation

An Online Doctor consultation is appropriate for: severe or frequent recurrences, prescription of oral antiviral treatment, suppressive therapy discussion, or treatment in pregnancy. For complications or atypical presentations, in-person assessment is preferred.

Sources: HSE.ie, NICE CKS Herpes Simplex Oral, ICGP.

🦠

HSV-1

Carried by 60-80% of Irish adults; reactivates intermittently.

Early treatment helps

Topical aciclovir at the tingle phase shortens outbreaks.

☀️

Common triggers

Sun, stress, illness, fatigue, menstruation, dental work.

Frequently asked questions

Am I infectious between outbreaks?
HSV-1 can be shed asymptomatically, but transmission risk is much higher during active outbreaks (tingle phase through fully scabbed).
Can cold sores be cured?
No — the virus persists lifelong in nerve cells. Treatment shortens individual outbreaks and reduces severity but does not eliminate the underlying infection. Some find recurrence becomes less frequent over years.
Is HSV-1 the same as genital herpes?
HSV-1 typically causes oral herpes; HSV-2 typically causes genital herpes. However, HSV-1 can cause genital infection through oral-genital contact, and HSV-2 can occasionally cause oral lesions.
Should I take a daily antiviral to prevent outbreaks?
For frequent (6+/year) or distressing outbreaks, suppressive antiviral therapy can reduce recurrence frequency significantly. Discuss with an Online Doctor.
Can I give cold sores to my baby?
Risk is highest with newborns (under 6 weeks) — never kiss a newborn with an active cold sore. Wash hands carefully; consider wearing a mask if you have an active outbreak around a young infant.
What about lysine, lemon balm, etc.?
Evidence for over-the-counter supplements is generally weak. Lemon balm cream has some evidence and is harmless. Lysine supplements have mixed evidence. None replace antiviral treatment for severe or frequent cases.

Speak with an Online Doctor today

Same-day video and phone consultations across Ireland.

Book a consultation
📞

Speak to support

+353 89 946 1472

✉️

Email us

support@doconcall.ie

🩺

Available

7 days a week · same-day slots

📞 Call Book — €34.99 →
🍪

We value your privacy

We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. Essential cookies are required for core functionality. Analytics and marketing cookies help us understand how you use our site and measure ad performance. You can choose which cookies to allow. Learn more

Strictly Necessary Required for the website to function. Cannot be disabled.
Analytics Google Analytics — helps us understand how visitors use the site.
Marketing Google Ads — measures advertising effectiveness.
Stuck? Tap me — I can pick the right service and find you a time.