Mosquitos don't normally bite two people in that short of a period of time. They digest the blood first. And by then, they either die or the virus had died off. It can't live outside the human body for very long. However, on a syringe, if used on two different people in a short period of time, the virus could still be on the needle itself as it goes into the skin. Needles can be used over and over (even though they're not supposed to be), but mosquitos can't feed that often. It's like eating a whole meal only an hour or less after eating another huge meal. You just wouldn't be hungry and then wouldn't eat anyway. So the mosquito just flies away before biting anyone else.
2006-07-10 19:30:48
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answer #1
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answered by chica_zarca 6
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Mosquitoes are powerful vectors for many diseases. The Center for Disease Control has always maintained that mosquitoes "cannot" transmit AIDS and/or the virus that causes AIDS, the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Rightly so from their standpoint. They have not found the smoking gun nor have they found one "high risk" person to prove otherwise. So let's look at this logically. The likelyhood of billions of misquitoes that are born every year to bite a person with HIV/AIDS are seemingly high. But! The odds of being bit by one of these mosquitoes are higher than winning the lotto. Why? Two very real factors; one is the lifespan of a mosquitoe and the probability that mosquitoes cannot thrive with HIV in their bodies and/or vice versa. The latter being the case. Still being tested, scientists are at a quandry of "why not"? Just as you and I ask. There is the theory that it is possible for the disease to be carried by mosquitoes, the scientists and epidemiologists have not found one case where this could be true. There is a problem with this theory. The fact that most populations that are tested are in industrialized countries for one, and that many third world countries cannot account for all of the deaths within that country. The thought being that the numbers of HIV/AIDS infected persons die without the disease being researched and these countries have high populations of both mosquitoes and infected people. The jury will be out until the CDC and the World Health Organization (WHO) can get to EVERY person infected, test and interview every single person. This is virtually impossible. I have to agree with the scientists to a certain degree. So, remember to wear your raincoat when you have sex.
2006-07-10 20:00:20
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answer #2
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answered by sailorbme 2
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The mosquito's feeding apparatus is an extremely complicated structure that is totally unlike the crude single-bore syringe. Unlike a syringe, the mosquito delivers salivary fluid through one passage and draws blood up another. As a result, the food canal is not flushed out like a used needle, and blood flow is always unidirectional.
The mechanics involved in mosquito feeding are totally unlike the mechanisms employed by the drug user's needles. In short, mosquitoes are not flying hypodermic needles and a mosquito that disgorges saliva into your body is not flushing out the remnants of its last blood meal.
Here's a great deal of information on why they don't transmit AIDS:
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~insects/aids.htm
2006-07-10 19:34:05
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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The major reason is this: syringes don't "eat" the blood, and a mosquitoe's "syringed" mouth is so tiny that the amount of blood on it either dries off in a few moments, or affect you majorly. While HIV +ve blood remains on or in the syringes you use, mosquitoes digests the blood (and dies), while their frequent movement and their love of wet spots meand sblod on them are frequently dried or dissolved.
2006-07-10 19:34:24
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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When mosquitos bite you, they do not put blood that they have already taken from someone else into you. they only withdrawl the blood from their victims. Also if they did take blood from someone with AIDS and lets say, they have blood on their mouth they fly around afterward and when AIDS touches air for a certian amount of time, the virus dies(it can't survive in air) so the blood on the mosquitos mouth no longer has the AIDS virus on it.
2006-07-10 19:37:37
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answer #5
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answered by black diamond 4
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i loved what the jewish sister suggested about protecting those who're no longer energetic its no longer orientation it extremely is a sin. its the deed. and certain the bible publicizes that even fornication and adultery reason ailment. and God says we'd want to continually no longer do any of it, such as sodomy. even in LDS theology a gay guy isn't excommunicated, except he's energetic and could no longer repent. many of the first christians were referred to as gay, and yet that is written they did repent. as for hiv and aids, i do do not ignore that all of us have some sort of hiv yet, that's the acts of gay sodomy it extremely is the volume one reason behind aids. i nevertheless remember the nationwide hype of aids killing a spouse of an adulterous gay guy. and certain the total clinical asociation suggested it became a "gay" ailment. and ive heard that the military invented it. or weaponized it, a twin of they did with blacks and syphilis. no individual must have sex, outside of marriage, all of it motives ailment. God by no potential gave mankind the right to have gay marriage. or condones gay sex, or animal beastiality sex. and that's been suggested many time, even a gay couple ought to have more suitable than 1000 companions. and purely those days i chanced on information articles that allege those that take drugs for aids, are easily finding out to purchase BLOOD (tablets -drugs) from agencies that.attempt on children and through torture and shortage of existence, the drugs human beings purchase are asociated with killing possibility free children and homicide
2016-11-06 04:52:28
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answer #6
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answered by olli 4
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because....once a mosquito bites you and takes your blood they die. They do not go and bite someone else, after.
check out this website. The information you are looking for is at the bottom of the page.
2006-07-10 19:30:39
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answer #7
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answered by rufus_t 2
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OK,if mosquito's don't carry,what about fleas,they do bite more then once,and can live 2 years without feeding.Also horse flies,deer flies and biting spiders?Kinda makes a laymen wonder.
I don't trust any blood sucker of any kind.
2006-07-12 18:41:38
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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the h.i.v. virus only lives for a few seconds when is drops below its optimum tempurature. use of needles will sometimes occur within seconds of each participant. my guess is that the mosquitoes body temp will not sustain life for the virus. just a guess.
2006-07-10 19:35:03
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answer #9
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answered by cerberus 2
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There are no proven cases that they can but I still think they do. :/
2006-07-10 19:29:44
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answer #10
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answered by KatieT 2
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