Genital herpes is usually treated with systemic antiviral therapy combined with local wound management, which will heal faster. Systemic antiviral treatment mainly refers to oral antiviral drugs, such as acyclovir, valaciclovir or famciclovir. The course of treatment and dosage is usually as prescribed by your doctor. If pain is evident, oral aspirin and ibuprofen can be taken to help relieve herpes pain. Topical treatment includes local cleansing, such as saline, chlorhexidine solution, or boric acid solution to treat the wound wound wound. Antibiotics and antifungal medications, if combined, can treat secondary bacterial or fungal infections. Topical antiviral agents, such as acyclovir cream or penciclovir cream, can also promote healing of herpes wounds. Patients with first-episode genital herpes are clinically cured when systemic symptoms disappear and lesions fade after treatment. Most people three weeks or so is enough, but the disease is prone to recurrence, especially within a year after the initial infection recurrence will be more frequent, genital herpes herpes simplex type 2 infection is more likely to recur than herpes simplex type 1 infection. Usually pay attention to drinking alcohol, spicy and stimulating food, fatigue, cold, anxiety, nervousness, these factors are very important factors that trigger recurrence, so usually pay attention to these aspects of prevention, help to reduce the number of recurrences.