Herpes is a viral disease.
It cannot become a different one.
HIV and herpes are two examples of disease-causing viruses for which there is no vaccine.
HIV, measles, chickenpox, the common cold, herpes, and mononucleosis are all viral infectious diseases.
yes it is, hiv is a disease. blood group is your type of blood.
Pregnacy HIV/ AIDS Herpes ( type 1 and 2) And many others
Bacterial meningitis, rabies, herpes virus infections, Lyme disease , HIV infection, toxoplasmosis, Jakob-Creuzfeldt disease, and late-stage syphilis.
It's possible. People with herpes can be more suceptable to getting HIV because it can pass more easily through open sores or blisters. So some one with herpes should abstain from having sex while they have any signs of a break out. But just so you know because some one has genital herpes that doesn't always mean they have HIV too.
you can get std's or get herpes if the penis has has a cut on it STD is sexually transmitted disease. You can get gonorrhea, hepatitis, HIV, herpes, genital warts, chlamydia..... To avoid the potential to get any STD, use a condom every time.
NO! Though you can have both concurrently.
AnswerAlthough HIV-1 and HIV-2 are closely related, they are thought to have jumped from primates to humans at different times (and from different species).HIV-1 is by far the more virulent of the two species of HIV.Because HIV-1 is more easily transmitted, it also spreads more readily and therefore accounts for the vast majority of global HIV infections.HIV-2, because it is much less transmittable, is largely confined to West Africa (where it is thought to have originated) and to West African migrant communities in Europe.HIV-1 also mutates more efficiently that HIV-2 and generally progesses to AIDS at a significantly faster rate than HIV-2 does.Also, HIV-2 has Vpr and Vpx proteins. HIV-1 has only Vpr. Differences between these proteins are actually on research.
A mouth disease can't cause HIV.
Yes you can, if you are infected with the virus.
HIV does not refer to a disease, but a virus that in-turn causes the disease AIDS. HIV is transmissible via the blood and saliva.