This is a total crap shoot.
The odds of getting HIV orally are totally dependent on the condition of the inside of the mouth of the person on the receiving end.
I moved away from California for many reasons. When I lived in California I had several friends in the Palm Springs area who were MD's treating HIV. According to what I was told it was indeed possible to infect in this manner, but, HIV is easily killed by things in sputum and in the digestive tract. It is possible, but it is NOT easy to get it this way unless your gums are in bad shape.
The pathway would be damaged gums, or areas where one has bitten the inside of their mouth without being aware of it. This does happen.
Your problem is really not HIV these days. What I do not understand is that there are great numbers of things that are now extremely resistent to treatment that are because of this becoming equally a horrific problem.
The basic rules of common sense:
1. Don't base safety on what some individual may or may not have or what you perceive as some safe route. Always assume some individual you do not know WELL is infected and take appropriate measures to prevent transmission.
2. Remember that while HIV cannot be spread by casual contact, some form of Hepatitis can. This same rules also apply to herpes and a few other unkind viral agents.
3. Unless what you are going to do between men is a mutual jack-off session, take every precaution possible and remember that common sense is what wins in this game.
The odds of getting HIV orally are totally dependent on the condition of the inside of the mouth of the person on the receiving end.
I moved away from California for many reasons. When I lived in California I had several friends in the Palm Springs area who were MD's treating HIV. According to what I was told it was indeed possible to infect in this manner, but, HIV is easily killed by things in sputum and in the digestive tract. It is possible, but it is NOT easy to get it this way unless your gums are in bad shape.
The pathway would be damaged gums, or areas where one has bitten the inside of their mouth without being aware of it. This does happen.
Your problem is really not HIV these days. What I do not understand is that there are great numbers of things that are now extremely resistent to treatment that are because of this becoming equally a horrific problem.
The basic rules of common sense:
1. Don't base safety on what some individual may or may not have or what you perceive as some safe route. Always assume some individual you do not know WELL is infected and take appropriate measures to prevent transmission.
2. Remember that while HIV cannot be spread by casual contact, some form of Hepatitis can. This same rules also apply to herpes and a few other unkind viral agents.
3. Unless what you are going to do between men is a mutual jack-off session, take every precaution possible and remember that common sense is what wins in this game.