No, it is basically a genetic condition that may be aggravated by environmental conditions, it is not communicable
Yes. Saliva is a body fluid and in certain circumstances HIV can be transmitted through it.No, there is not enough HIV in saliva to be transmitted.
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.
Blood.seman,milk in the womans breast,urine
Mucus, Urine, Semen, and Cerebrospinal fluid.
You can't get HIV from sweat or saliva. HIV is transmitted by blood, semen, vaginal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, and breastmilk.
HIV is transmitted through infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk. Eating after someone with HIV isn't a transmission risk, however there may be other infections you could get like colds and flus.
Aids is transmitted sexually and any exchange of bodily fluids.!
Pressure in fluids is transmitted equally in all directions due to the fluid's property of being incompressible. This is described by Pascal's principle, which states that any change in pressure applied to a confined fluid is transmitted undiminished throughout the fluid. So, when pressure is applied to a fluid at one point, it is uniformly distributed to all points within the fluid.
yes. saliva is a digestive fluid.Yes
The Pascal's principle states that a change in pressure applied to an enclosed fluid is transmitted undiminished to all portions of the fluid and to the walls of its container. This principle is the basis of hydraulic systems, where a force at one point in a confined fluid is transmitted to another point through the fluid.
It's not saliva comes from your mouth
According to the NFPA, fluid power is energy that is transmitted and controlled through a pressurized fluid--liquid or gas. Fluid power valves regulate the liquid or gas as it moves through valves, hoses, and fittings.