No, antibiotics are made for bacteria. A virus is something else all together. However, it is not uncommon for someone to be sick with a viral infection, such as the flu, and then get sick with a bacterial infection immediately after due to their immune system being stressed. In those cases, antibiotics may be given.
Because antibiotics are designed to fight bacterial infections, whereas antivirals are used to combat viral infections.
It is difficult to treat viral disease because antibiotics do not work against viral diseases and also antiviral can be given but they are no really used because of adverse side effects.
Only bacterial infections they are not effective for viral infections.
Antibiotics are used to fight bacterial infections not viral infections.
Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections such as chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis. Antibiotics cannot treat viral infections such as HPV, herpes and HIV.
It is spelled herpes (virus and viral disease).
Bacterial infection. Antivirals are used to combat viral infections.
Viral diseases are caused by viruses which live in our cells as a host. So, killing them by antibiotics means killing our own cells. This is why antibiotics are not effective against viral diseases.
Antibiotics kill bacteria. Antivirals kill viruses. However, a patient with a viral infection might sometimes be given antibiotics to reduce the work the patient's defenses have to do or to stop opportunistic infections.
Usually nothing. Antibiotics won't help it has to run its course.
"Anti-" is a common prefix for antibiotics, indicating that they are used to combat or oppose bacterial infections.
NO! Antibiotics have no effect at all on viruses and should never be used to treat viral infections and doing so accelerates the evolution of antibiotic resistance in bacteria.