Possible? Barely. Likely? Absolutely not.
No,HIV DOES NOT SPREAD IF A HIV INFECTED PERSON SUCK BLOOD FROM A CUT OF ANOTHER PERSON. IT SPREAD ONLY WHEN THE HIV INFECTED PERSON HAVE CUT ON HIS MOUTH,LIPS OR INSIDE HIS MOUTH. HIMANSHU (KALYAN)
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".
HIV is transferred through bodily fluids such as blood or semen, so no a wart would not transfer HIV regardless if the person has a cut or not. If a person has a cut on their finger and the HIV infected person is bleeding and it gets into the cut, there is a chance of infection but it is a much lower risk than unprotected sex.
Yes if you have a cut or broken skin and the HIV infected persons blood enters the cut or broken skin.
No. HIV can not survive in an oxygen rich environment. Unless you're eating out of a syringe, contraction from food isn't an issue. -CSM http://www.hivaidssearch.com/facts/hiv_aids_sneeze_cough_risk.htm
The probability that HIV can be transmitted via the described activities is almost zero. HIV is a "frail" virus and cannot survive outside a body long. Additionally, a burn is a wound, but minor ones come with their own seal; the heat closes the wound pretty well. No fluid leakage in that minor burn.
no. HIV is only disributed into your bloodstream. so... unless you cut yourself and someone else with HIV cut themselves with the same razor, you're safe
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.
HIV is transmitted through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid and/or breast milk. The skin is the body's first line of defense against any infection. HIV is not easily transmitted and the risk described in minimal.
Theoretically, yes it is possible to get HIV from using the same appliance, but it is highly unlikely. The HIV is carried in the bloodstream of a human being. For it to infect you, the previous person using the appliance would need to have a cut in their mouth, and then you would need a cut in your mouth. Even then, it's still more likely that it would miss your cut altogether and go strait to your stomach and die in the hydrochloric acid.
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.
It would be highly unlikely to catch HIV by someone touching your cut.