I know this is already 4 +years old, but I'm going to post anyway in case others find this.
Medical use of Cannabis, specifically edibles creams for topical use, have been a MASSIVE help to me in preventing breakouts fromy herpes infection. Some topicals are made specifically for vaginal use, but even if the aren't labeled that way, most of safe to apply to your genitals. Of course, I would still confirm that product by product with a professional or at least someone with first hand experience. The edibles aren't for getting high or pain reduction. Just having a low daily dose has helped prevent breakouts. I used to have a small cut directly above my clitoris that almost never went away, seriously it was there 75% of the time and almost every time I had sex (penetration) with my husband, I had a huge breakout. For a few years we were down to only having sex on big occasions or when I was so horny I was willing to accept the next few weeks of dealing with a breakout. We stuck almost exclusively to oral and it even got to the point where I would sometimes get a breakout just from using a vibrator and having an orgasm.
The daily edible dose and regular use of a topical flipped it completely! The cut is completely gone, rarely even surfaces during a breakout. The breakouts themselves are down to....well...ai started using cannabis in 2018/19 and have had only 2 fairly bad breakouts (but no where near as bad as before) and one small breakout that was gone within a few days.
I also tend to notice a sharp pain in the bottom of one or sometimes both feet right before a breakout so I take 2 big Valtrex immediately when that happens. You'll need a prescription for it but that should be easy to get. And there is a generic now so it's really cheap.
Good luck! This info saved my sex life so I have to share it as much as possible:)
Genital to genital rubbing (if unclothed) is definitely a risk for herpes. Herpes is transmitted via skin to skin contact, and friction helps transmit it.
Hsv2 is unlikely to transmit via oral, giving or receiving. Muscle aches could be a symptom, but fasciculations and painless tongue sores aren't.
I'd still get this confirmed since it's so low and you have hsv1 already.
Yes, I would absolutely test again. Unless you performed oral on someone with an hsv2 outbreak in the past, I'd consider that to be highly likely to be a false positive. (At 5 days, you wouldn't be positive from this exposure - it's not possible.) Many experts think that anything below a 3.5 needs to be confirmed.
If all you've done is given oral, and had no genital to genital contact ever, and actually do have herpes, then yes, it would have to be oral. There is good news in that - it would be highly unlikely to recur, and to transmit. You should read the Herpes Handbook for more about herpes and how it acts in each location, and testing - https://westoverheights.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/08/Updated-Herpes-Book.pdf (It's free, and written by one of the world's leading herpes experts.)
It's possible, but unlikely. You also wouldn't test positive 5 days after exposure. If you do have herpes type 2, and I really, really doubt you do, it would be an older infection, since it can take up to 4 months to develop antibodies (which is what the tests look for). Most people will develop them by 6 weeks, but not within 5 days.
I'd suggest a retest. Also, can you get a copy of your tests? You need to make sure it is a type specific IgG test, and not a combination test, where it give a result for 1&2, and you can't tell which type you have.