There are many body fluids that are not a risk for HIV infection. Tears, sweat, urine and saliva do not carry risks for HIV transmission.
saliva cannot carry the aids virus.
Blood and Lymph are the two main body fluids.
Only if one or both of the women have HIV.
Blood. Other fluids also carry HIV, but in trace amounts. Saliva will not freely spread HIV. (I've heard that you could drink two gallons [four liters] of saliva from an infected individual and still have just a small percentage of risk.) Sweat is even less potent. This is why universal precautions (i.e. gloves) are a must for every single run you go on. It only takes a drop of blood to land on or near a break in your skin for you to run the risk of infection.
Blood and lymph these are the two circulating fluids
Drink plenty of fluids throughout the day!
No. If neither partner has the HIV virus, then neither one can get AIDS. AIDS is caused when HIV has gotten to far along. In order for you to get AIDS, you have to have blood to blood contact with someone that is HIV positive.
You can't catch AIDS. You catch HIV, and you can progress to AIDS. kinda like having a cold and progressing to the Flu. now with HIV once your t cells (white- blood cells) reach below 200 then you are considered to have AIDS
HIV lives in blood and other body fluids that contain blood or white blood cells. People have gotten HIV through: 1. unprotected sexual intercourse with an HIV-infected person. This includes vaginal or anal intercourse, and oral sex on a man or woman without a condom or other barrier. Intercourse while a woman is having her period, or during outbreaks of genital sores or lesions (caused by herpes and other sexually transmitted diseases) can increase the risk of HIV transmission. 2. sharing drug injection equipment (needles and/or works); or being accidentally stuck by needles or sharp objects contaminated with infected blood. Discover more in recommended related link below.
The possibility of spreading AIDS is no different for gay people than it is for straight people. If the infected bodily fluids of one person get inside another person's body, the virus can be transmitted. The two main ways of spreading the HIV virus that causes AIDS are:unprotected sex (straight or gay)sharing of syringes
It is possible, but not likely. HIV cannot survive long outside the body, but Hepatitis can live in dried blood for up to two weeks.
when HIV attacks the body the person can carry on as normal - latency is the delay between when you contract the disease and when it starts to transform into AIDS that's why its called HIV/Aids because one leads to the other. And the latency period between the two can be 5 years or so. That's why the Virus is so dangerous and deadly because you can have it and not be aware for a loooong time and infect other people without you or them even knowing about it! Nasty...
two ears of corn