Radiation Treatment does not make the patient radio-active you know!
I merely creates heat, similar to a micro-wave oven.
You can get chlamydia from someone who is infected. The partner's cleanliness has nothing to do with it.
Men can become infected and can transmit many of these infections to other women. The sexual partners of women who have these infections also should seek medical treatment.
It means you have an STI - which you passed on to your partner - both of you should be seen by a doctor (a) to discover what the infection is and (b) to get a course of treatment. Until it's diagnosed and treated - neither of you should engage in sexual activity either with your partner or anyone else !
Radiation pneumonitis is in relation to being exposed to radiation, therefore the only way another person could get this inflammation of the lungs is by having their person exposed to radiation as well.
No his partner was (passed 1990) however he is ok
Because after the nuclear reactor had a meltdown many people were exposed to radiation giving them cancer, and various other problems due to radiation exposure which would kill them. and not only does it effect the people that were exposed to it at that moment but radiation mutates your genes which are passed down to your kids causing many complications in newborn children.
hope you saved
Light is electromagnetic radiation. It does not need a medium to support it.
No, Because there is a very big radiation which is no human can passed by on it.
Marijuana has a number of important medical uses. It is an extremely effective treatment for nausea - possibly the best available treatment for patients who suffer from severe nausea (which is a common side effect of chemotherapy, for example). It also is a useful treatment for glaucoma.
No. That is the simple, short answer. However, technically -- If there is a blood to blood contact there is an obvious chance of passing on anything in your bloodstream to your partner. Though even if you both were bleeding profusely (unlikely) the amount of 'medication' passed on through the blood plasma exchange would be so minimal it would not be detected in the partner not on the medication. In other words, there is no chance of medication having any effect on anyone you have sex with under any possible scenario. The medication is already metabolized in your body, and it is *not* transmitted through sexual chemicals.. ie: Ejaculation. --I would like to add if your partner is highly allergic to a medication you are taking it would be best to err on the side of caution.
they were mad