In short, yes. However, you should always wear a condom when having sex with someone that is known to have Herpes or any STD. Even when wearing a condom there is no guarantee of not getting the disease and avoiding gentital and other mucous membrane contact is the best bet to not getting the disease.
Normally to pass Herpes the person with it has to have an active outbreak, however it has been reported to pass without any symptoms present in one's sexual partner.
Avoid putting your mouth or face near genitals with herpes as it has been known to spread to eyes, mouth and other areas of the body.
NO it is imposible to spread the virus like that
It doesn't matter how long he's had it. If he has trichomoniasis he can pass it onto his partner. It's easily cured with a several pills for both male and female. Planned Parenthood treats this
There are to many factors to answer that based on the question.Are you male/ female?What STDS?DId you get Pelvic inflammatory disease?If you are female with herpes and do get pregnant you will have to deliver C section so not to pass the virus to your child.My question is why would you wait 5 years to get treated?
It is on the X Chromosome (male have XY chromosome Females have XX Chromosome)
HSV 1 is the virus that causes oral herpes which is what causes cold sores and fever blisters on the mouth. HSV2 causes genital herpes, usually located on the genitals, inner thighs, buttocks or anus. But HSV1 can affect the genitals. If some one with a visible cold sore gives their partner oral sex they could pass cold sores to their partners genitals. Also HSV2 can affect the mouth. If some one gives their partner oral sex around the time they have a break out of herpes then they could pass genital herpes to their partners mouth.
yes male pee is much stronger, smarter, and generally more agreable than female pee.
Men pass their X chromosomes to their daughters. Men have both X and Y chromosomes. If they were to give their offspring an Y chromosome, it would have to be a male. If they gave their offsping an X chromosome it would have to be female. XX is female, XY is male.
Study after study shows that treating a man for BV doesn't decrease the risk that his female partner will get it.
The sex chromosomes determine the sex of an organism. In humans, it is the 23 pair. Females pass on either or their X chromosomes, while males pass on either their X or their Y. If the male passes on their X chromosome, the resulting offspring is female. If they pass on their Y chromosome, the resulting offspring is male.
genital herpies arnt that bad its fun cuz now you can share them i gave it to all three of my cuzin
Medicham/Hitmonchan (male) with ice punch Breed with female buneary -> hatch egg to get buneary (male) with ice punch Breed this male buneary with scraggy (female) to pass on ice punch to scraggy egg.
The short answer is NO as long as both participants are healthy with no STD's! The more complete answer would include: There is nothing harmful in the ejaculate of a healthy male but a male infected with STD's could pass those along to the partner. If either the male or the female has a Sexually Transmitted Disease (STD & Including HIV/AIDS), that disease can be transmitted. Some STD's can be easily treated with Antibiotics others can be DEADLY. Syphilis, Gonorrhea, chlamydia, Herpes, AIDS/HIV, genital warts, Hepatitis-b are all STD's & some can kill you others are treatable, Condoms area good line of defense for most diseases but they too can fail.