No it can not.
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.
No, you can't get HIV from kissing or spitting. Exception is if the saliva has blood in it.
HIV can be transmitted by blood and breast milk. HIV can't be transmitted by sweat and saliva.
You can't get HIV from sharing a glass of wine. HPV is not transmitted in saliva.
You can't get HIV from sweat or saliva. HIV is transmitted by blood, semen, vaginal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, and breastmilk.
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's are found everywhere.
Blood.seman,milk in the womans breast,urine
No, HIV (which causes AIDS) and hepatitis C are not transmitted through saliva. While saliva can contain these viruses, the concentrations are too low to pose a significant risk of transmission through activities like kissing or sharing utensils. The primary modes of transmission for these viruses are through blood, sexual contact, and, for HIV, from mother to child during childbirth or breastfeeding.
If the skin is not a mucus membrane, or the genital area, then if you had intact skin HIV can't be transmitted. You could hold HIV infected blood in your hand, with intact skin, and it wouldn't be transmitted.
I guess that there is no possibility of you getting infected by a woman spitting on your penis because HIV in not transmitted by saliva.
HIV is not transmitted via sweat, tears, saliva, urine, and feces. It's also not transmitted by air, radio, thought, intent, meaningful looks, whispers, and playing cards.