Welcome to the OutUK series looking at gay men and their health brought to you in association with the NHS website.
Each week we'll tackle a different topic in our A to Z of Gay Health. We'll have features and advice on everything from relationships, sexual health, mental and physical conditions and how to stay fit. You can follow any of links provided below for more information direct from the NHS website, or see this week's feature O: Orthodontics.

Causes

In the UK, most cases of HIV are caused by having sex with a person who has HIV without using a condom.

A person with HIV can pass the virus on to others even if they do not have any symptoms. People with HIV can pass the virus on more easily in the weeks following infection.

HIV treatment significantly reduces the risk of someone with HIV passing it on.

Sexual contact

Most people diagnosed with HIV in the UK acquire the virus through unprotected vaginal or anal sex.

It may also be possible to catch HIV through unprotected oral sex, but the risk is much lower.

The risk is higher if:

  • the person giving oral sex has mouth ulcers, sores or bleeding gums
  • the person receiving oral sex has recently been infected with HIV and has a lot of the virus in their body, or another sexually transmitted infection

Who's most at risk?

People who are at higher risk of becoming infected with HIV include:

  • people with a current or previous partner with HIV
  • people with a current or previous partner who is from an area with high HIV rates
  • people who are from an area with high HIV rates
  • people who engage in chemsex (using drugs to help or enhance sex)
  • men who have unprotected sex with men
  • women who have unprotected sex with men who have sex with men
  • people who inject drugs and share equipment
  • people who have unprotected sex with somebody who has injected drugs and shared equipment
  • people who share sex toys with someone infected with HIV
  • people with a history of sexually transmitted infections, hepatitis B or hepatitis C
  • people who have had multiple sexual partners
  • people who have been raped
  • people who have received a blood transfusion, transplant or other risk-prone procedures in countries that do not have strong screening for HIV
  • healthcare workers who could accidentally prick themselves with an infected needle - but this risk is extremely low
  • babies born from a parent with untreated HIV

How HIV is transmitted

HIV is not passed on easily from one person to another. The virus does not spread through the air like cold and flu viruses.

HIV lives in the blood and in some body fluids. To get HIV, 1 of these fluids from someone with HIV has to get into your blood.

The body fluids that contain enough HIV to infect someone are:

  • semen
  • vaginal fluids, including menstrual blood
  • breast milk
  • blood
  • lining inside the anus

Other body fluids, like saliva, sweat or urine, do not contain enough of the virus to infect another person.

The main ways the virus enters the bloodstream are:

  • by injecting into the bloodstream with needles or injecting equipment that's been shared with other people
  • through the thin lining on or inside the anus, vagina and genitals
  • through the thin lining of the mouth and eyes
  • through cuts and sores in the skin

HIV is not passed on through:

  • spitting
  • kissing
  • being bitten
  • contact with unbroken, healthy skin
  • being sneezed on
  • sharing baths, towels or cutlery
  • using the same toilets or swimming pools
  • mouth-to-mouth resuscitation
  • contact with animals or insects like mosquitoes

How HIV infects the body

HIV infects the immune system, causing progressive damage and eventually making it unable to fight off infections.

The virus attaches itself to immune system cells called CD4 lymphocyte cells, which protect the body against various bacteria, viruses and other germs.

Once attached, it enters the CD4 cells and uses it to make thousands of copies of itself. These copies then leave the CD4 cells, killing them in the process.

This process continues until eventually the number of CD4 cells, also called your CD4 count, drops so low that your immune system stops working.

This process may take up to 10 years, during which time you'll feel and appear well.

Read about the symptoms of HIV

OutUK's A to Z of Gay Health continues and you can read this week's feature O: Orthodontics. We have covered many subjects in this series and you can catch up with all of our Previous A to Z Features.

If you want to find out more about this particular topic you can visit the Original article on the NHS website. If you are worried by any aspect of your health make sure you go and see your doctor or book an appointment at your local clinic.

Photos: LightFieldStudios and one of VladOrlov, Stockcube, darak77, ajr_images or rawpixel.com.

 

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