Monday, November 24, 2008

Can you get HIV/AIDS for sucking your partners nipples and drinking the milk from her breast


Can you get HIV/AIDS for sucking your partners nipples and drinking the milk from her breast?
I wanna know cuhz ive been goin out with my gf for a long time and we agreed to have safe sex but i just wanted to know if you can get HIV/AIDS by drinking or sucking there breast milk
STDs - 11 Answers
Random Answers, Critics, Comments, Opinions :
1 :
NO. Dont worry you wont
2 :
bodily fluids so yes i think yu can?!
3 :
YES YOU CAN. I wouldn't even have safe sex with her. You're gonna screw your life up man...Is it really worth it? I mean, come on dude... http://westtnliving.wordpress.com/2007/10/19/breast-milk-can-spread-aids-to-babies-you-can-help-by-sending-your-aids-free-breast-milk-to-africa/ Read that...You'll freak
4 :
no, its not submitted orally, it has to get into ur blood streams....
5 :
Yes. When HIV was first discovered in the early 1980s, many women contracted the disease through having a blood transfusion during childbirth. Sadly, they then unintentionally passed it on to their children by breastfeeding.
6 :
yes check out HIV in wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HIV
7 :
YES you can. Infants can be infected by their HIV positive mothers in this manner. If your girlfriend is indeed lactating (which she shouldn't be unless she's pregnant, had a child recently or is breastfeeding one still), then just don't do it. I've given 2 links about how HIV can be spread via breastmilk... google HIV and breastmilk for thousands more. Please-- have fun but be safe!
8 :
Yes it is possible (if you have even the tiniest cut in your mouth)
9 :
HIV Infection For Duration Of Breastfeeding http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2004/06/040618064447.htm
10 :
u can if you drink the breast milk
11 :
The answer to your question is: it is possible but unlikely. Yes, infants are at high risk if breast feeding from an HIV+ woman but it is different with older children and adults. In an infant, there is a brand new GI tract that easily gets inflamed as new substances (liquid, food) are introduced. This can increase the likelihood of the breast milk getting into the blood stream. Once HIV were to reach the stomach, the acid would easily kill it. In infants, the upper GI tract is not a fully closed system as infants require nutrients quickly. In an adult, or even older child, this is not the case. It is relatively difficult for an HIV infection to be acquired orally. The mouth is a pretty inhospitable place for HIV and the tough mucosal membrane makes it difficult to get in. It is possible, but unlikely. As well, there is often not a whole lot of HIV in breast milk (relative to the other fluids). You are taking a risk. And HIV is not the only thing that can be found in breast milk. If this is something you are into, then it is important that you research more about it and what you need to know to keep you safe.



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