The simple answer is bodily fluid exchange whether by sex or blood transfusion with tainted blood. I am relatively sure that some dentists got it from patients but but in those cases blood not saliva was the culprit . There have been cases of health care workers coming down with HIV but they were working with spinal fluid and brain fluid. It is most present in blood, vaginal fluid, semen, and the ones I already mentioned. There have been reports of people coming down with it after deep french kissing however in all of these cases gum bleeding was a factor. HIV is not present enough in saliva for the virus to be transmitted and it cannot live outside the body very long. So you cannot get it from a toilet seat or any other topical type contact like hugs or touching.
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)
No No, to get AIDS you must have physical contact with another person who has AIDS. You cannot get AIDS if you did not have physical contact with another person who has AIDS. Hope this helped !
Saliva has no Aids or HIV in an infected person but everything else can spread the virus.
Not unless youre masturbating together with someone who has HIV.
No, aids can only be passed on through body fluids. IE Sperm, Saliva and also blood. How ever, to get aids from saliva you have to drink at least 9 litres of it so kissing is fine. So if your partner does not have aids you will not get it from that partner.
HIV is only spread via unprotected sex, sharing IV drugs, blood transfusions, and mother to child
Hiv aids.
No you will not as saliva does not have enough virus in it to transmit.
HIV is a virus. AIDS is a diagnosis. HIV is contagious and causes a person to develop AIDS. AIDS is not contagious and only occurs in people who are HIV+.
No, HIV is not easily spread through simple casual contact. HIV is spread when bodily fluids come in direct contact with the bloodstream of another person.
Indirect contamination is the opposite of direct of contamination which does not need to do direct contact to be contaminated. An example of this is a person with HIV/AIDS who shares needles with another person that has no HIV/AIDS. These two people did not have any direct contact with each other, but sharing needles with HIV/AIDS or any types of diseases is an example of indirect contamination which could lead the healthy person to also get the HIV/AIDS.
AIDS (HIV infection) is not spread via casual contact, sweat, feces, tears, vomit, urine, or saliva.