Transmission AIDS
Enviado por garcialara • 13 de Junio de 2012 • 413 Palabras (2 Páginas) • 340 Visitas
Transmission AIDS
The AIDS virus is transmitted from one person to another through several methods:
• Blood or blood products
• Mother to infant
• Sexual contact
• Sharing of needles or syringes
Blood
• Accidents in health care (i.e., needle stick or other medical instruments)
• Ear piercing
• Needle sharing with an infected person for any reason (IV drug needles [only minute amounts of blood are needed]
• Receiving a blood transfusion with infected blood (blood donations in the U.S. have been screened for HIV since 1985)
• Steroid needles
Blood or blood products
Prior to 1985 HIV was frequently transmitted by blood transfusions because there was no effective way to test blood for the AIDS virus.
Sexual Contact
The virus can be spread in:
• Artificial insemination with semen from an infected person
• Body fluids including sperm
• Oral sex
The infection can be spread from unprotected sex (sex without condoms) with an infected partner, including:
• anal intercourse
• oral intercourse
• vaginal intercourse
and is spread from:
• men to men
• men to women
• women to men
• women to women
The virus can enter the body during sex through the:
• lining of the vagina
• mouth
• penis
• rectum
• vulva
You are also at risk if you have another sexually transmitted disease such as:
• Bacterial Vaginosis
• Chlamydia
• Gonorrhea
• Herpes
• Syphilis
as you are more susceptible to acquiring HIV infection during sex with an infected partner
HIV has been detected in the saliva of infected individuals, however, no evidence exists that the virus is spread by contact with saliva. Tests show saliva has natural compounds that inhibit the infectiousness of HIV. No evidence has been found that the virus is spread to others through saliva such as by kissing. No one knows, however, the risk of infection from so-called "deep" kissing, involving the exchange of large amounts of saliva.
Families of HIV-infected people have shown clearly that HIV is not spread through:
Casual Contact such as :
• biting insects such as mosquitoes or bedbugs
• sharing of bedding
• sharing of food utensils
• sharing of towels
• swimming pools
• telephones
HIV can be spread from Mother to infant during:
• Birth (Peripartum)
• Breast feeding
• Pregnancy (Intrauterine)
Treating Pregnant Mothers
During pregnancy or birth women can transmit HIV
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