STDs and AIDS are primarily spread through unprotected sexual contact, including vaginal, anal, and oral sex, with an infected person. They can also be transmitted through sharing contaminated needles, from mother to child during childbirth or breastfeeding, and through blood transfusions with infected blood. Additionally, some STDs can spread through skin-to-skin contact. Practicing safe sex and getting regular screenings can help reduce the risk of transmission.
AIDS is an immune system disease caused by HIV, which is spread by sex, among other ways. AIDS does not cause other STDs, although people with AIDS are more likely to have complications if they contract STDs.
www.naco.com
Unprotected sex.
STDs can be transmitted through direct sexual contact, including vaginal, anal, and oral intercourse. They can also spread through skin-to-skin contact with infected areas or sores. Additionally, sharing contaminated needles or other drug paraphernalia can facilitate the transmission of certain STDs.
buttsex anD AIDS
traders and visitors
YES, this is one of the ways in which HIV is spread. This is why if you suspect you may be infected you should be tested during pregnancy, as treament can reduce the rate of transmission by 80%.
Certainly. HIV can spread through other ways that sexual contact. And if the "virgin" has been doing oral or anal sex, then those are also possible ways to pick up HIV.
Breast milk, semen, female secretions, and blood spread the virus. There are a number of ways that the virus may be given to you, the main being SEX (oral, anal, or vaginal).
AIDS isn't spread at all. AIDS is not contagious. HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) is the virus that causes AIDS. HIV is spread through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk.
Right now, in 2011, there is not a medication to cure AIDS.
HIV, the retrovirus that causes AIDS, is present in the semen, vaginal secretions, blood, breast milk, and in the amniotic fluid of an infected person. Contact with these fluids can cause a person to become infected with HIV. However, the saliva of an infected person is generally considered safe (unless contaminated with blood/the non-infected person has open wounds in their mouth).