It has nothing to do with viruses unfortunately, and viruses are clever enough to escape from such drugs.
Gvu
Antibiotics are only effective against bacteria, not viruses, and HIV is a virus.
because HIV is a virus and antibiotics treat bacterial infections.
Definitely the answer to this is an emphatic NO. If you have HIV then you are a host for HIV and vice versa. You cannot be one without the other.
the forms in which hiv hides in the host cell is retrovirus
No, pulling out will not avoid HIV infection.
By growing inside T-cells, HIV is able to avoid detection and elimination by the host's immune system. The virus resides within the cells, where it can replicate and persist without being exposed to antibodies or immune cells that typically target extracellular pathogens. This intracellular lifestyle allows HIV to evade immune responses and establish a chronic infection in the host.
By exchange of body fluids.
As of June 2014, Arsenio Hall does not have HIV or AIDS.
The role integrase plays in HIV is that it fuses viral DNA with host DNA.
Antibiotics are used to treat bacterial infections such as chlamydia, gonorrhea and syphilis. Antibiotics cannot treat viral infections such as HPV, herpes and HIV.
If you have HIV antibodies then you are infected with HIV. The only exception to this is if you are a newborn. Newborns carry mothers IgG antibodies to HIV and the half life of IgG is approximately 21 days.