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i am married for five years and lately i raed a paper about analsex and how its easy to get infacted with hiv. my Q is that i want to know if i am at risk of geting infacted, we just tryed it once but i'm worried becouse i'm not to sure about what i raed.idont have any symthoms and both of us are negative the last time i got tested was when i was pregnat 4 years ago. if not infacted how can i prevented.

2007-01-10 15:24:04 · 14 answers · asked by MISS S N 1 in Health Diseases & Conditions Infectious Diseases

14 answers

If you are both not infected and monogamous then you should not get HIV

2007-01-10 15:28:37 · answer #1 · answered by toietmoi 6 · 5 0

Anal sex is dangerous. It can actually take years to discover if a person has been infected with HIV. If neither of you have had contact with other individuals you are fairly safe from not getting HIV, but you are not safe from getting other sexual diseases. Anal sex is very risky as you might imagine if you think about all the germs involved with feces(poop). Anal sex which exposes you to about a gazillion germs including HIV is riskier for women then men. Some people use condoms for safe sex, but you are still at risk of tearing the rectum internally. Think long and hard about whether you want to indulge in this risky behavior.

2007-01-10 15:36:24 · answer #2 · answered by ruthie 6 · 1 0

They say this because some people are naive and think that anal sex is not real sex. It is. If you and your sex partner is negative, you have nothing to fear. But just like getting it any other way, it could take years to show up. And with the epidemic so harsh now, most doctors suggest you get tested yearly just to check. As a woman, you can get anything easily, like HPV, which looks just like a discharge, but can lead to ovarian cancer.

I doubt you have AIDS or HIV, but still get tested just to be sure. Cause although you got tested when you were pregnant, you could have had it and it not show on a test.

2007-01-10 15:31:35 · answer #3 · answered by mishasma 2 · 1 0

Because the anus is not naturally lubricated and the tissues are different the chances for tiny tears in the skin due to force or friction are increased. Those small tears obviously bleed and allow for bodily fluids infected with HIV to enter the blood stream. If your partner is infected with HIV there is a risk regardless of the orifice you choose to entertain yourselves with. :-)

2007-01-10 15:32:48 · answer #4 · answered by MIMI 1 · 1 0

Please see the web page for more details on Anal sex and HIV infection. Please avoid anal sex as it is injurious to health. People with AIDS or who have had positive HIV antibody tests may pass the disease on to others. Avoid oral, vaginal, or anal contact with semen from HIV-infected individuals. Avoid unprotected anal intercourse, since it causes small abrasions in the rectal tissues, through which HIV in an infected partner's semen may be injected directly into the recipient's blood.
Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection results from 1 of 2 similar retroviruses (HIV-1 and HIV-2) that destroy CD4+ lymphocytes and impair cell-mediated immunity, increasing risk of certain infections and cancers. Initial infection may produce nonspecific febrile illness. The risk of subsequent manifestations—related to immunodeficiency—is proportional to the level of CD4+ lymphocytes. Manifestations range from asymptomatic carriage to the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS), which is defined by serious opportunistic infections or cancers. HIV infection is diagnosable by antibody or antigen testing. Treatment aims to suppress HIV replication by combinations of drugs that inhibit HIV enzymes.

2007-01-10 15:43:10 · answer #5 · answered by gangadharan nair 7 · 0 0

For various reasons: that's greater hassle-free status up - like interior the bathe! The *** cheeks sense plenty greater efficient to bump against than a flat tummy! once you're long, you do no longer ought to concern approximately hitting her cervix. gazing the region, it hits her g-spot (in the time of the anal/vaginal wall) greater directly. that's super start administration! It takes a while to get her waiting, so it prolongs foreplay, which we the two like. And, particular, the tightness is super (she's in a position to squeeze anally plenty greater efficient than vaginally)! And, for a threesome (MFM), that's recommendations-blowing for all in contact! And particular, we the two enjoy it whilst she straps one on and does me!

2016-10-06 23:40:09 · answer #6 · answered by kinjorski 4 · 0 0

The anus has thin walls or membranes that easily allow both medicine (suppositories) and pathogens to enter the blood stream. Here's a rule of thumb, consider the anus an EXIT and not an entrance.

2007-01-10 15:29:03 · answer #7 · answered by amazingly intelligent 7 · 2 1

IGNORE MR. CLEAN. YOU AMY GET HIV FROM ANAL SEX AS EASILY AS VAGINAL. HIV IS PASSED THROUGH BODILY JUICES...BLOOD, SEMEN, EVEN KISSING(BLEEDING GUMS/GINGIVITIS OPEN SORES IN MOUTH) AS FAR AS SYMPTOMS GO, IT IS NOT VERY COMMON TO EXHIBIT SIGNS IN EARLY STAGES. ANY DOUBT, PLEASECHECK OUT. THERE ARE PLENTY OF FREE, CONFIDENTIAL CLINICS YOU MAY GO TO. NOW GOOD LUCK AND HAVE FUN, JUST BE SAFE. USE PROTECTION, WHICH FOR THE RECORD IS NOT ONE-HUNDRED PERCENT ACCURATE.

2007-01-10 15:37:09 · answer #8 · answered by Rio 5 · 0 0

first off....if you and your husband are true to each other you won't have to worry about HIV. second....if you think you're still at risk keep getting the both of you tested. third...i think anal sex is gross and the anus is an exit not an entrance. you can still hit the vagina (the right sex hole) from behind.

2007-01-10 15:28:54 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 2

You need to protect yourself if getting Anal is your favorite..Its not really neccesary to do the anal thing... Dont take your organs to heaven, heaven knows we need them here! Use them!

2007-01-11 03:36:28 · answer #10 · answered by manpo2k 2 · 0 0

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