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by H. Hunter Handsfield, M.D., Dec 18, 2009 10:28AM
Oral-penile sex carries risk of gonorrhea
, nongonococcal urethritis (NGU), syphilis, and herpes due to HSV-1. But the risk is low even with prolonged exposure and near zero for the brief exposure you describe. And if you caught any of these, most likely you would develop obvious symptoms. If you don't develop penile sores or abnormal discharge in the 2 weeks following the exposure, don't worry about it. I do not recommend testing if you have no symptoms. There is no risk for HPV or chlamydia.
There is no debate (among experts) about the HIV risks associated with oral sex.在业界专家当中没有人认为HIV和KJ有关 The risk is so low that almost nobody who cares for HIV infected patients has ever had a patient believed to have been infected that way. Among experts, it's a semantic issue about using terms like "no risk" and "very low risk".(专家中极小的危险和没有危险没有区别,只是用词的区别) There is no difference between my or Dr. Hook's use of "low risk" and other experts' "no risk".
If I were in your situation, knowing what I know, I would not be tested for HIV or any other STD,(如果我接受了口交我不会去做HIV检测甚至其他性有关疾病的检测) and I would continue unprotected sex with my wife(我在接受KJ之后仍然会和我太太进行无保护性jiao). That should tell you how low the risk is -- even while admitting some theoretical risk(这将告诉你口交感染HIV的概率在包含理论概率的同时有多么得渺小). So please move on. This issue isn't worth the level of emotional energy you are putting into it.(所以你无需对WTBDKJ上浪费情绪,让你焦虑) |
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