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If you have sex with an HIV positive male...?


If you are a female and you have sex with an HIV male with no condom and he ejaculates inside you what are the odds that you will have HIV??? If you answer please back up your answer with facts because me and a friend have a bet. Thank you so much for your responses.

a bet How cute how about you do the research you self and win the bet the fair way instead of making us do all thw work

HIV is most persistant amongst PPL with unprotected sex the sperm from the infected persons body when enters into a vignia starts cultivating and starts to grow inside the persons body...However thsi does not happen all the time it onle happens when a uninfected female has had her periods recently(2 weeks and less) when the chances of getting infected are 90% as the ovum is still sometimes open for the sperm to mate


CHEERS!!!

About 20%.

But, if you do it ten times, then that means that you're almost 100% positive to get it.

You can't really answer this question to any degree of accuracy.

There have been studies which have looked at the transmission of HIV from unprotected sex and have come up with numbers for different sex acts.......HOWEVER, these are not meant to be used as a guide to asses risk. These studies have been misused over and over again by people who misinterpret them.

There are sooooo many factors that also need to be looked at (which is why you can't come up with an accurate number):
-the amount of virus in his semen, how much semen
-the presence of STIs on the man OR woman's genitals (most STIs in women have NO symptoms and therefore unless you are screened regularly you wont know if you have one)
-cuts or microtears in the vagina (you won't feel them, so you never know if they are there.... you can get them easily)
-your genetic makeup is also a component that would need to be factored in (certain mutations affect the ability of HIV to infect or cause disease)
-did you douche before sex?
-how much lubricant was used / was present?
-was anal sex involved?
-was oral sex involved (if so, was a condom used?)

Way too many factors. Bottom line, HIV transmission during sex is not 100% (which means it doesn't happen every time, but it could very well happen the first time)

If you have done this then you should report to a GP, hospital or sexual health clinic immediately for "post exposure therapy", a large dose of antivirals can sometimes prevent an infection being established, but it needs tobe taken as soon as possible after exposure to be of any beneift!

But i'll hope you are just being hypothetical:

there are many factors involved, both from the HIV positive male and his partner.

Firstly, I assume you mean vaginal sex? the risk from viginal sex is much lower than anal sex, one of many reasons why HIV is more prevalant among gay men. Transmission via oral sex is genuinely regarded as low, but there is not much evidence about it, you should still use a condom.

Secondly it depends on the satge of disease and effectiveness of treatment. If the guy has effectlvly treated HIV and his "viral load" is very low the risk of transmission is much reduced.

Thirdly the health of the vagina, rough sex and STD's both greatly increase the risk.

Rough sex doesn't have to be anything kinky, just anything that causes cuts or abrasions. Like fingering in foreplay where a fingernale could have left a scratch. Or not enough foreplay so the vagina was not sufficently well lubricated. Even injuries tyhat are too small to see or feel increase the risk of HIV transmission.

The bigest factor is the presence of any local infection. In either parnter. For exapmle: warts, herpes, or even a yeast infection. There are two way infections increase the risk of transmission, one is that they produced raw or open skin and mucosal membranes, just picture what a scabby cold sore or athlete's foot looks like. The other is that they increase the number of white blood cells in the area. White blood cells are the type of cells that get infected (helper T-cells and dendritic cells to be precise). So if the male has another STI there are more infected cells in his semen and the on skin of his penis, increasing the number of viral particles transmitted. If the female in your scenario has another STI then there are lots of cells which can be infected hanging out at the site of contact.

In the best case scenario, well best case scenario you aould have a healthy partner and use a condom, but best case scenario within your paramaters, you would have vagianl sex, well lubricated sex, no other STI's, no cuts or abrasions, and a partner with a nearly undectable viral load.

Some people think that in this ideal case transmission is almost impossible. But it's still not worth the risk, partly because HIV is such a horrible disease that any risk is too high, and partly because the chances of all the cirteria fort this ideal case actually being met are very low.

sorry i can't give you an acurate number, it is rather hotly debated actually, but my friend the medical studnet tole me it was 1/1000 or 0.1% risk in the ideal scenario.

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