Yes, assuming the person is infected with HIV.
HIV will flourish in blood, CSF, semen, and vaginal secretions.
It lives in Blood, Semen, and Vaginal Secretions.
Yes, you can get hiv by eating vaginal fluid.
No it does not cause it but it can transmit it or contract it.
Body fluids that can transmit HIV include blood, semen, vaginal secretions, breastmilk, cerebrospinal fluid, and synovial fluid. Saliva and urine are not infectious for HIV.
You can't get HIV from sweat or saliva. HIV is transmitted by blood, semen, vaginal secretions, cerebrospinal fluid, and breastmilk.
HIV is not in lubricants such as KY Jelly or astroglide.
if you mean in bodily functions then; blood, urine and vaginal secretions
Yes, a history of herpes doesn't provide immunity from chickenpox.
Women do not have sperm. If you're talking about a woman's vaginal secretions then yes it is possible and does on occasional occur during unprotected intercourse.
HIV is only transmitted by five bodily fluids: blood, semen, preseminal fluid, vaginal fluid, and breast milk. Any of those fluids from an infected host getting into the body of another person can transmit HIV. No other fluids (saliva, urine, etc.) from the body transmit HIV.
The transmission of HIV occurs when a person is exposed to HIV+ body fluid. In order to transmit infection, the fluid must come in fluid-to-fluid contact (blood-to-blood) or with a mucuous membrane. During vaginal sex, the woman is exposed to semen, however a female's vaginal fluid does not necessarily penetrate the intact skin of the male. Among sexual behaviors, HIV is least likely to be past from a female to a male through heterosexual vaginal intercourse.