Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Is my Report Conclusive

I had protected sex with a massage girl on 4-March-2017. I didn't notice if the condom was ruptured or broke. After one week i had lower abdomen pain and doctor mentionedConsidering that you and your wife have sex only with each other (except on one occasion on 4th March), that was prostatic and in July 2017 i felt headache, neck pain, lower back pain, armpit pain and few red rashes on skin and my body is itchy now. Few sores came in my mouth. I went for HIV1/2 screening on 14-December-2017. The result was non reactive and the report shows the method used was “Immunochromotography”. I am not sure of this method and I did another test which is HIV 1/2 and P24 Combo test on 16-December (method:CMIA)result was value 0.09 and it was non-reactive. I did the complete STD Panel (HIV, VDRL, HSV, HCV, HBsAg) and all were non-reactive.  

After the exposure with massage girl using condom in March 2017, I had intercourse with my wife in March 2017 without condom. Since I felt ARS symptoms all the above tests are done in December 2017 and all the tests done in December 2017 are non reactive (negative), I consider these negative for both me and my wife considering that me and my wife have sex only with each other (except on one occasion in March)

Can you please tell me if the report is conclusive
1 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
20620809 tn?1504362969
You never had a risk in the first place.  You can't miss a broken condom and you had protected sex.  No risk at all.  And even if you did, yes, your tests are conclusive.  Time to move on.
Helpful - 0
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the HIV Prevention Community

Top HIV Answerers
366749 tn?1544695265
Karachi, Pakistan
370181 tn?1595629445
Arlington, WA
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Condoms are the most effective way to prevent HIV and STDs.
PrEP is used by people with high risk to prevent HIV infection.
Can I get HIV from surfaces, like toilet seats?
Can you get HIV from casual contact, like hugging?
Frequency of HIV testing depends on your risk.
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) may help prevent HIV infection.