The information I gave you came directly from the CDC. HIV is unable to reproduce outside its living host (unlike many bacteria or fungi, which may do so under suitable conditions), except under laboratory conditions, therefore, it does not spread or maintain infectiousness outside its host.
Thank you for your response. I have looked at doctor's forum and they don't seem to commit to the idea that HIV becomes inactive outside of its host. As a matter of fact correct me if I am wrong. But the CDC states that a few people have become infected through environmental surfices ( not that many but some nonetheless). Here we had new fluids that touched my penis and urethra ( including the inside). It seems like my situation would be riskier then the casesvthat CDC reports.
You might have developed urithritis but you didn't have a risk of contracting HIV.
Oral sex is not a risk of contracting HIV even without using a condom.
HIV is not transmitted outside it's host.
Not a thing because you didn't have a risk.
No there was no penetrative sex what so ever. But I did develop urithritis and burning pee, logic tells you that I might have gotten something.
A. if I got something. Doesn't that me I could have gotten hive? The reason why ask is because I call a hotline and the guy told me that is got chlamydia then that is the same route of transmission so I have a risk.
B. If they were new fluids, barely out of her, what would be the impact
C. wha would be the difference if she had a high viral load?
You didn't have penetrative sex. You never had a risk.
For clarification purposes. Her vaginal fluids did get on the tip of my penis.
No condom hem the tip of penis came in contact with urethra. Four days lar burning urination. What is the risk