Member Comments are provided by individuals and reflect their personal opinions only. Under NO circumstances should you act on any advice or opinion posted in this forum. ALWAYS check with your personal physician before taking any action regarding your health! MedHelp International and our partners, sponsors and affiliates have no obligation to monitor any comments posted on this site, or the content and/or accuracy of such exchanges. MedHelp International does not endorse the views of any user.
If you believe you have been exposed to HIV and want help to judge your risk, would like advice about HIV testing, or have questions about the effectiveness of condoms or risks associated with specific sexual practices, this is the site for you.
You need to test at 12 weeks post exposure to be sure.
From now on...PLEASE use protection. 2 min might not be a long time, but it's all it takes....and you may have gotten lucky this time, but if you keep taking chances, you may not be as "lucky" the next.
I knew my status was almost certainly negative but I did take the test and advised this most recent partner. I suspect this is why he stopped communicating, he believes he is fine since my result shows he was in zero danger from me.
You may be right about the lack of communication....and that IS a good thing that your baseline was neg...otherwise you may have also had the burden of worrying if you could have infected your partner. Youch!
Anyway....your risk is probably pretty low all things considered. You can get tested at 6 weeks post exposure for a VERY good indication of your final results...then again at 12 weeks for your conclusive results.
Hang in there.....don't be googling...you'll drive yourself batty!!! :0) Take Care!
If you have unprotected sex, regardless how long the duration...it is always a real risk of HIV infection. I suggest you do a HIV test 12 weeks after the incident.
If you are too stress out by this incident, take a HIV test at 6 weeks. The 6th result will be a good indication of your conclusive result at 12 weeks.
As this is a HIV Prevention forum, I will not discuss too much on other STDs. However, your does sound like a fungal infections or perhaps just in your mind.
While brief, you did place yourself at risk with the unprotected sex (your partner's risk being even higher...I didn't see you mention any history of you having been tested?)
You need to test at 12 weeks post exposure to be sure.
From now on...PLEASE use protection. 2 min might not be a long time, but it's all it takes....and you may have gotten lucky this time, but if you keep taking chances, you may not be as "lucky" the next.
Oh, and btw, fecal matter is not infectious itself...and the presence or absence of it makes no difference in determining level of risk. If you inserted your penis inside your partner's anus, it was insertive sex...fecal matter or not.
Best of luck to you....
This was only 2 weeks after the incident, so I know it doesn't clear me, but it confirms I was negative at the time of this incident.
Over the last six months or so I have been with 5 other men, always protected (on 2 occasions, condom used for oral as well). I always was penetrative. The last of these episodes took place around the end of May, so the HIV test at the beginning of July was about 5 weeks after this.
I knew my status was almost certainly negative but I did take the test and advised this most recent partner. I suspect this is why he stopped communicating, he believes he is fine since my result shows he was in zero danger from me.
Anyway....your risk is probably pretty low all things considered. You can get tested at 6 weeks post exposure for a VERY good indication of your final results...then again at 12 weeks for your conclusive results.
Hang in there.....don't be googling...you'll drive yourself batty!!! :0) Take Care!
90% of all people with HIV develop candida infection just because they are immunocompromised.
I get the feeling it's unusual for a healthy man to get candida in their mouth, and my urologist says I probably got candida on my penis from RECEIVING oral sex from my partner.
He feels the 2-minute anal exposure and negative STD tests make oral transmission likelier than anal transmission. He also said something about how the presence of the fungus in my partner's mouth may not cause any type of infection in my partner, but when it gets in the penile area, it can cause infection.
Any thoughts? I realize maybe this is more STD-related than HIV-related, but of course I am only really worried about the HIV risk here.