I read in late studies that you can not get aids by receiving oral sex. But you can get ghonerrea, chylmadea, herpes. Do you agree? Also does the medicine for g/c have a weak effect. Like do you experience fatigue and flu like syptoms? Contrary to popular belief, oral sex is not a completely safe alternative to vaginal or anal sex. Chlamydia, human papillomavirus (HPV), gonorrhea, herpes, hepatitis (multiple strains), and other sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) 鈥?including HIV 鈥?can be transmitted through oral sex.[14]. However transmission of HIV through fellatio or cunnilingus is relatively rare. Any kind of direct contact with body fluids of a person infected with HIV (the virus that causes AIDS) should be avoided. In 2005, a research study at the College of Malm枚 in Sweden suggested that performing unprotected oral sex on a person infected with HPV might increase the risk of oral cancer .[15] The risk from most of these types of infection, however, is generally considered far lower than that associated with vaginal or anal sex.
Furthermore, oral sex should be avoided when either partner has wounds or open sores on the genitals or mouth, or bleeding gums in the mouth, or has recently brushed, flossed, undergone dental work, or eaten crunchy foods such as potato chips, all of which can cause small scratches in the lining of the mouth. These wounds, even when they are microscopic, increase the chances of contracting STDs that can be transmitted orally under these conditions. Such contact can also lead to more mundane infections from common bacteria and viruses found in, around and secreted from the genital regions. Because of this, many medical professionals advise the use of condoms in the performance of fellatio (flavoured condoms are available for this purpose) and the use of plastic or latex sheets (dental dams or ordinary plastic wrap) for cunnilingus, although the latter has failed to achieve the same level of widespread use as condoms. stop having casual sex. It can if you have any break in the surface of the skin and you come into contact with bodily fluids. If you come in contact with bodily fluids yes you can get it orally, however getting HIV/AIDS from spit alone is rare... You would have to drink a ton a spit to transfer it I would not risk it for a few minutes of pleasure always take precautions The virus doesn't live long outside the human body, but if the uninfected partner has anything by way of mouth ulcers, sores, recent dental work, etc., they're at risk. if the woman is on her peroid, he/she can contract aids, and yes the meds for g/c can give you those side effects. Thats right, you can contract those other std's from oral but aids no because it is a blood contratced patogen,the only way you can get it orally is if her gums are bleeding and she sucks you off. Just get a girl who is not hiov postive to clean your clock... apparently the odds of AIDS being contracted by ingestion of infected semen is very slim. an amount of 7 litres ( or some numerical value to that effect) must be ingested in order for a person to be infected. but it is true that other diseases and symptoms be derived from intercourse. stay on the safe side, check your partner's background HIV/AIDS can be contacted by receiving oral sex. Many symptoms exist. Go see a doctor ASAP Yes you can contract HIV through having oral sex, it is carried in blood and fluids. I don't know what medicine you are talking about, so I can't comment there. You can get it from oral sex. Here is this study from the CDC. If you really read the story, especially about this part:
"through December 2005 there were fewer than 50 cases of women who had sex with other women, with no other risk factors,鈥?she said. 鈥淭hese are the ones that were followed up on with the health department. Ninety percent of those [50] cases were found to have another risk factor."
You discover the problems that there are with getting accurate facts. Basically, the CDC data says that oral sex is not a method to get HIV, and that other risk factors are - DRUG USAGE - and that people go to the doctor and lie about their risk factors. I guess the lesbos were too embarrassed to cop to being crack heads or junkies.
Once you start reading the literature you discover that that the alleged HIV antibodies are not specific to HIV, HIV has never really been isolated, and life style - drugs, malnutrition, other factors, are the cause of "AIDS" -- not a virus.
I think that the men are probably liars also about drug use.
If you think about it, do you know any regular people with HIV. All the straight college kids that went on to live productive lives **never** have HIV. A whole of f - ing goes on in college.
CDC data show no risk of HIV in lesbian sex
Sex with men, drug use are main transmitters
By ELIZABETH A. PERRY
Jul. 14, 2006
Women who have sex with women face the lowest risk of contracting HIV than any other group of the sexually active population, according to a report from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention.
鈥淲e are not aware of any confirmed cases,鈥?said Dr. Patrick Sullivan, acting deputy director for science with the CDC鈥檚 Division of AIDS Prevention.
But that fact comes with a few caveats: Women who have sex with HIV-positive men or share intravenous drug needles with a person with AIDS are engaging in high-risk activities. Blood transfusions and artificial insemination also can raise the stakes.
鈥淏ut over the last couple of decades there has been a sustained systematic effort to understand the transmission risk of women having sex with other women,鈥?Sullivan said. 鈥淚f the CDC becomes aware of HIV-infected women who have sex with other women, the health department will try to understand how the transmission occurred.鈥?br>
It鈥檚 still theoretically possible for women to contract the disease from each other, according to unpublished statistical data included in the CDC鈥檚 updated fact sheet 鈥淗IV/AIDS among women who have sex with women.鈥?br>
Public health officials use the term 鈥渨omen who have sex with women鈥?instead of 鈥渓esbian鈥?because they said sexual practices and sexual identity mean different things to different people.
Statistics for the fact sheet were gathered by studying 246,461 women who were diagnosed with HIV as of December 2004. Of that number, 7,381 said they had sex with women, but had other risk factors, including injection drug use, sexual contact with infected men or a blood transfusion. Some 534 women who were sexually active exclusively with other women were diagnosed with HIV, but had another risk factor like intravenous drug use.
In an update to the 2004 figures, Dr. Kathleen McDavid, an epidemiologist with the CDC, said as of December 2005, more than 250,000 women had been diagnosed with HIV since the beginning of the AIDS epidemic.
鈥淭hrough December 2005 there were fewer than 50 cases of women who had sex with other women, with no other risk factors,鈥?she said. 鈥淭hese are the ones that were followed up on with the health department. Ninety percent of those [50] cases were found to have another risk factor.鈥?br>
Sullivan said the most common means of transmission for women is intravenous drug use and sex with HIV-infected men. He said that AIDS counselors do the best they can with the information they are given at the time to identify risk factors, even if some of them do not emerge until a follow up visit.
鈥淲hen a woman has just received a diagnosis, she might not be willing to talk about all the risk factors that might be present,鈥?he said. 鈥淲e know from initial reports that women who were diagnosed injected drugs or had sex with a male partner.鈥?br>
Ryland Roane, supervisor of the Virginia Department of Health HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Hotline, said the CDC tries to track individual HIV cases of women who have had sex with men all the way back to 1978.
鈥淏ut there doesn鈥檛 have to be a man somewhere,鈥?he said. 鈥淚t could be intravenous drug use.鈥?br>
Lesbians not exempt
from sexual precautions
Beth Marschak, a health educator with the HIV/STD/Viral Hepatitis Hotline, said some women who identify as lesbian may have had sexual contact with men at some point in their lives, even if it was only once. Others have never been with men, but they might be surprised by some of the ways they can still be at risk.
Dr. Philippe Chiliade, medical director of the Whitman-Walker Clinic in metropolitan Washington, D.C., said he has only heard of one anecdotal case of an HIV-infected woman who had sex with another woman, but had no risk factors. He said the risk of HIV transmission between women is 鈥渆xtremely low,鈥?however the theoretical possibility of transmission is greater during the first few months after a woman is infected.
鈥淚f one partner has a high viral load in her vaginal secretions she is a lot more contagious,鈥?he said.
Chiliade said lesbians are not exempt from sexual precautions because there are many other STDs that are a lot easier for them to get, including chlamydia, gonorrhea, pelvic inflammatory disease, herpes and human papillomavirus. |