because the white blood cells are more suspectible to infection.
No it will not. HIV must be specifically tested for.
HIV, if untreated, has the potential to affect all body organs.
Casual contact, sweat, tears, feces, urine do not affect the spread of HIV.
The ER will not find HIV unless they specifically test for the virus.
Yes, a person with blood type O positive can get HIV. Blood type does not affect a person's susceptibility to HIV infection. HIV is a virus that can infect anyone, regardless of their blood type. It is important for everyone to practice safe behaviors to prevent HIV transmission.
HIV infection does not affect bowel movements.
HIV attacks and destroys the immune system, specifically the white blood cells that fight infection.
by all means
HIV infects only the CD4 cells of the immune system, and it destroys lymphocytes.
An HIV blood test is specifically set up to test that. An indication of an infection may show in your CBC as a low white blood count, but is not specifically indicative of HIV. If you want to avoid its being in your medical record, there is free HIV testing in local agencies.
aids is an hiv: human immunodeficiency virus. and hiv is an std.
People do not die specifically from the virus HIV, but complications from the infection such as AIDS.