yo im mister awesome i am not sure what your asking, if you mean can aids be found through a normal blood test then let me just make something clear, aids is a virus that attacks you immune system, once aids takes effect it will be very apperant because you will lose weight and be highly subsetable to infection and disesase, so yes it should be able to be found through a blood test because your white blood cell count should be very low. also HIV the infection that CAUSES the disease known as aids can be found through a blood test, im not sure what you mean by a 'normal blood test', the HIV anti bodies can usally be found 3 months + after your orignal infection of the HIV virus. hope this helps, and remember have safe sex
An HIV blood test can tell if you are pregnant. When doctors get results back from a blood test, though they may be testing for a specific thing other things will get flagged as well. For example, when you take a home-pregnancy test and then go to the doctor's to confirm you are pregnant, often they will run blood tests to determine pregnancy. An HIV blood test will show whether or not you have HIV, but will also show whether or not you are pregnant.No; a HIV blood test won't tell if you are pregnant.
No, thyroid blood tests do not show HIV in the test results. HIV testing is a separate test that specifically looks for the presence of the HIV virus in the blood. Thyroid blood tests measure levels of thyroid hormones to assess thyroid function.
Depends on what type of blood test you take. Regular blood tests do not show AIDS, unless you ask for the facility to look for it. If you have a blood test done for, as an example, being a blood donor, then they will look for AIDS
You describe a normal complete blood count. That is a finding separate from the HIV test. Whether you need an HIV test is not based on the complete blood count; instead, you should have an HIV test based on your risk factors for acquiring HIV.
The HIV test is searching specifically for antibodies that would indicate the presence of HIV in the body. And although there are a few conditions (liver disease, prior vaccinations, and lupus, among others) that may trigger a positive result other than HIV, using weed is not one of them. Weed, or marijuana, does contain a chemical called THC that can be detected by a blood test, but the HIV antibody test is not one of them.
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.
No the HIV test is not a medical examination. It is a blood test.
No, HIV is not checked in routine blood tests. The test must be specifically ordered.
It can take up to 60 days.
You can not conform the presence of HIv with the blood test, you need to go with ELISA, tridot and also western blotting.
There is a specific blood test for HIV which is used for diagnosis.
A thyroid blood test will not detect HIV. Ask for the HIV test by name.