No
HIV is ONLY transmitted through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk. All other body fluids do not contain an adequate amount of HIV to infect another person.
HIV is transmitted through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk. Fluid-to-fluid exposure is required to transmit infection. Healed wounds would likely not pose an HIV transmission risk.
HIV can be transmitted by semen or by vaginal fluid, even if those fluids don't meet. The pathogen is transmitted though mucous membranes or broken skin, not through some alchemy that occurs when vaginal fluid and semen meet.
HIV is not in lubricants such as KY Jelly or astroglide.
The medical term for female vaginal fluid is cervical mucus.
No.
No. Only certain bodily fluids carry the HIV virus, like blood, semen, and vaginal fluid. Casual contact, even contact with other bodily fluids (tears, saliva, etc.) does not pose a great risk of spreading the virus.
AIDS is a blood pathogen. it can be passed through blood, seminal and vaginal fluid, and on extremely rare occasion saliva. it is only passed through direct contact with the infected fluid, so an open wound would have to be exposed to the contaminated fluid in order for it to be transfered.
No. HIV is transmitted through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk.
1 - Through blood exposure. 2 - Through breast milk. 3 - Through bodily secretions such as vaginal fluid and ejaculate. 4 - In utero (from mother to baby).
The transmission of HIV occurs when a person is exposed to HIV+ body fluid. In order to transmit infection, the fluid must come in fluid-to-fluid contact (blood-to-blood) or with a mucuous membrane. During vaginal sex, the woman is exposed to semen, however a female's vaginal fluid does not necessarily penetrate the intact skin of the male. Among sexual behaviors, HIV is least likely to be past from a female to a male through heterosexual vaginal intercourse.
Vaginal fluid attracts sharks.