1) Nobody is known to have ever acquired HIV by kissing, even when cuts etc were present. It probably can occur, but is very rare.
2) I doubt you can draw any inferences from the time it takes for test results to return. It is dependent less on the result (positive or negative) than on simple operational aspects: when the specimen was drawn, when it arrives in the lab, when the lab does its next test run, and when the lab sends out the results. (Most labs don't just run an HIV ELISA individually when it arrives in the lab. The run a batch when enough specimens have come it to make it more efficient than running one test at a time.)
Good luck-- HHH, MD
It is impossible to get HIV from kissing. ZERO chance. It has never happened. If it did happen, we would ALL have HIV by now.
what about potential exposure to blood?
Also do you know what's normal turnaround time for HIV test if all is normal. Thanks I am obsessing a bit.
I took an HIV test in my doctor's office this past summer and it took a week to get the results. My test was negative.
You will not get HIV from kissing.
http://www.cdc.gov/hiv/pubs/facts/transmission.htm
thanks I feel a bit better. But if blood got in my mouth would you still consider the risk to be Zero or minimal and would not in any event warrant testing (despite the fact I already took the test). Thanks
Among babies born to HIV positive mothers, only ~30% become infected after living inside mom's body for 9 months and being vaginally delivered, with all the blood which that enatils. For families and babies, a 30% chance is horrible. But it tells you a bit about the efficiency of HIV transmission for any particular sexual exposure or through blood contact with mucous membranes. Virtually (but not literally) zero.
HHH, MD
I received my HIV test results at 9 weeks, Negative for HIV-1. SInce my exposure was with a woman who spent a lot of time in Marocco should I also get tested for HIV-2?. Should I also test at 12 weeks?
Thanks