"HIV the virus that causes AIDS is in all bodily fluids, this includes semen, vaginal and anal secretions, feces, urine, tears, saliva,blood. It is most concentrated in Blood. Anytime there is an exchange of bodily fluids with a person infected with the virus that causes AIDS there is a chance of infection."
Probably the worst answer. You can receive through tears and saliva, BUT the chances are less than 0.1%
To become infected with HIV you must get a sufficient quantity of the virus into your body. Saliva does contain HIV, but the virus is only present in very small quantities and as such cannot cause HIV infection.
Unless both partners have large open sores in their mouths, or severely bleeding gums, there is no transmission risk from mouth-to-mouth kissing.
HIV is unable to reproduce outside its living host, except under strictly controlled laboratory conditions. HIV does not survive well in the open air, and this makes the possibility of this type of environmental transmission remote. In practice no environmental transmission has been recorded.
This means that HIV cannot be transmitted through spitting, sneezing, sharing glasses, cutlery, or Musical Instruments.
You also can't be infected in Swimming Pools, showers or by sharing washing facilities or toilet seats.
The HIV virus, which may lead to AIDS if untreated, is spread by sharing needles and by sexual intercourse. So to avoid HIV, you should never share injecting needles (get a new one, or make sure the old one is REALLY sterile), and you should always use a condom when having sex.
No. AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome) is a diagnosis and is not contagious.
HIV (Human Immunodeficiency Virus) is the virus that causes someone to develop AIDS. HIV is also not transmitted through contact with saliva. HIV is contracted through contact with infected blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk.
AIDS is past thru the bloodstrem. Theoretically AIDS could be past on if two people had open sores when 'switching saliva'. or if blood is involved in some way.
No. HIV infection is passed through contact with an infected person's blood, semen, vaginal fluid or breast milk.
No it can not. unless there is blood in it and you have an open cut in your mouth and even then it is extremely unlikly
Yes if their may be un noticed ulcers or sores
Yes, but it would take an ENORMOUS amount of saliva to transmit the virus. Like a few hundred gallons.
yes/no, if the person has a cut in the mouth and it is blood in the saliva you can get infected
Yes, saliva can transmit HIV/AIDS, but it is quite an uncommon occurrance. Blood and reproductive fluids are much better carriers and transmitters of HIV/AIDS.
No, aids can only be passed on through body fluids. IE Sperm, Saliva and also blood. How ever, to get aids from saliva you have to drink at least 9 litres of it so kissing is fine. So if your partner does not have aids you will not get it from that partner.
No, it is a sexually transmitted disease. Blood or Semen in your eye can give you aids
No, you can't get HIV from kissing or spitting. Exception is if the saliva has blood in it.
No; saliva does not have enough of the virus to transmit the infection. However, if blood is in the saliva, the virus can be transmitted.
Diseases can spread by either saliva or licking some one else blood because they could have aids... and if you'd drink there blood... you could get aids because aids are in the blood... and it could by saliva because that's how ray bees spread because ray bees are in the saliva!
No; saliva doesn't transmit the HIV virus.
It depends, if your partner has active HIV virus then yes you could potentially get HIV or AIDS from *ANY* body fluid. So think sweat, saliva, blood, etc.
Yes & no. HIV/AIDS is rarely (if ever) transmitted through kissing; when it does occur it probably relates to open sores on the lips or in the mouth that allow exposure to blood, not just saliva.
No you will not as saliva does not have enough virus in it to transmit.