If you cut the skin and had an opening in the skin and his fluids/blood got into the cut it is possible that HIV could be transmitted. Check with a doctor to be sure.
No, there is no chance. The virus has to pass into the bloodstream through a cut or abrasion. It can't get there from the stomach. See the Related Question below: "How is HIV transmitted?"
HIV is easier to catch through broken skin than through intact skin, but you can still avoid HIV by not having genital-genital contact with someone who has HIV.
No it can not.
HIV can enter through any break in skin. If the molluscum bump is open, HIV is more likely to enter.
If the skin is not a mucus membrane, or the genital area, then if you had intact skin HIV can't be transmitted. You could hold HIV infected blood in your hand, with intact skin, and it wouldn't be transmitted.
No it can not go through your skin. If it enters your body possibly.
No. In order to reach the bloodstream it must be introduced via an area of damaged skin, intravenous injection, or damage to the stomach or intestines. One cannot, for example, cantract HIV/AIDS or hepatitis from simple exposure to blood on the surface of the skin.
Yes if there is a fluid to bodily fluid contact. HIV is found in blood, sweat, tears, vaginal and semen and saliva. Really only things like blood, sex fluids and breast milk contain enough of the virus to infect.
Yes, you can have sex. Or some of your blood can pass on to another person causing them to have HIV.
The most common way to pass on HIV person to person is by sexual contact.
They are not very effective in preventing HIV transmission. They are probably better than nothing, but lamb skin condoms have microscopic holes in them - the holes are small enough so that sperm cannot pass through, but STDs and HIV are still a risk.
It's possible. HIV is transmitted through bodily fluids. Mess around with bodily fluids while you have a cut on your skin would get it "inside".