I had done a Intercourse with a girl
Me done a fingering in vagina and no cut in my fingers
After 10 to 15 seconds I try to insert penis in vagina without condom 1 time and no penis gone inside vagina & penis touch vagina and vagina fluids and penis head skin in penis head there is very small skin break
Then I wear condom in penis & then done 1 time vagina sex and no condom break and not slip
Its risk of hiv?
Me also eaten viropil pep medicine for 22 days and started after exposure at 67 hours and no miss dose till 22 days
After stoping medicine then from 1 week to 26 days someday feel body itching fill bit and feel itching mostly evening 8 to 10pm & solve also and at 25th days I get 2 red skin at stomach small one and I apply coconut oil its solved in 2 days properly
Before that there is a penis skin minor small red dana or pimple I apply coconut it in same day proper
Its hiv symptom?
I m save from hiv please tell??
Last exposure its 2 month plus now but sometime and its solve also
Answers (12)
Get your queries answered instantly with Care AI
FREE
Hello,
For consultation
1. Pay ( ₹ 500 only, 50 % off ) and consult by practo.
2. Or pay ( ₹ 500 only, 50 % off ) and send message by GPay. My mobile number is +91959508739nine.
3. If required call to +91959508739nine.
Take a glass of milk daily.
Thanks.
Answered
Flag this answer
Let others know if this answer was helpful
Was this answer helpful?
YESNO
Didn't find the answer you are looking for?
Talk to experienced doctor online and get your health questions answered in just 5 minutes.
Thank you for reaching out with your concern. I understand your anxiety about potential HIV transmission from this exposure. Let me provide you with a comprehensive assessment based on the details you've shared.
Regarding HIV Risk Assessment:
Based on your description, the actual HIV transmission risk from this specific exposure is extremely low, though not zero. Here's why:
- Fingering without cuts on fingers carries negligible HIV risk
- Brief genital contact (20 seconds) without penetration and without ejaculation poses very low risk
- The intact condom use during actual intercourse protected you effectively
- The small skin break on penis head does increase risk slightly if it came in direct contact with vaginal fluids
However, the risk remains low because:
1. HIV transmission requires significant viral load exposure
2. Brief contact without ejaculation reduces transmission probability
3. You took Viropil (PEP) within 67 hours, which is excellent timing and significantly reduces HIV risk
4. You completed the full 22-day course properly
About Your Current Symptoms:
The timeline of your symptoms is important:
- Body itching started 1 week to 26 days after exposure
- Itching mainly occurs in evenings (8-10pm)
- Two red spots appeared on stomach at day 25
- Last exposure was 2 months ago
Critical Analysis:
- Acute HIV symptoms typically appear 2-4 weeks after exposure, not at varied intervals like you're describing
- Isolated itching without other symptoms (fever, rash, sore throat, fatigue, night sweats, swollen lymph nodes) is NOT characteristic of acute HIV infection
- Your itching pattern (time-specific, resolved with coconut oil) suggests allergic reaction, contact dermatitis, or anxiety-related symptoms
- The 2 red spots could be unrelated dermatological issue
Other Possible Causes for Itching:
1. Anxiety and stress (very common after potential HIV exposure)
2. Allergic reaction to medications or environmental factors
3. Dry skin or eczema
4. Contact dermatitis
5. Other STIs (though less likely to cause only itching)
Testing Recommendations:
Since your last exposure was 2 months ago:
- 4th generation HIV test (Antigen/Antibody) is now highly reliable
- This test is 95% accurate at 4 weeks and 99% accurate at 6 weeks
- At 2 months (8 weeks), the test is conclusive
- Final confirmatory test at 3 months (12 weeks) is recommended for complete peace of mind
Your PEP course significantly reduced any potential transmission risk, and your symptoms are not consistent with HIV seroconversion illness.
Next Steps
1. Get HIV Testing Done Urgently: - Schedule a 4th generation HIV test (Antigen/Antibody test) immediately at any diagnostic center - This test is conclusive at 2 months post-exposure - Get final confirmatory test at 3-month mark for 100% certainty - Also test for other STIs: Syphilis (VDRL), Hepatitis B and C, Herpes if concerned 2. For Current Itching Symptoms: - Consult a dermatologist if itching persists or worsens - Take antihistamine like Tablet Cetirizine 10mg once daily at bedtime for 5-7 days - Apply calamine lotion or moisturizer to affected areas - Avoid hot water baths and harsh soaps 3. Mental Health Support: - Consider consulting a counselor if anxiety is affecting your daily life - HIV-related anxiety is common and treatable 4. Future Prevention: - Always use condoms from the very beginning of any sexual contact - Never have any genital contact without barrier protection - Consider PrEP (Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis) if you have ongoing risk 5. Follow-up: - Return with your test results for interpretation - Document any new symptoms that develop - If test is negative at 3 months, you can be completely reassured
You can consult me directly on Practo, or reach out via WhatsApp:
Eight Seven Six Two Seven Four Nine Nine Seven Four
I’ll guide you step-by-step with easy-to-follow treatment plans.
Early consultation helps avoid complications — feel free to connect.
Only whatsapp message no calls
For your HIV related assumption,you need to go though investigation to
Confirm or to rule out.both partner should get the test done.
For itching related take tab Allegra 120 mg for 15 days HS ( at night time)
f/u if needed.
Next Steps
for more information can consult me for the same
Health Tips
maintain personal hygiene and stop self medication if possible.
If you want to discuss your problem in more detail, feel free to message me on WhatsApp at nine one one nine two five five six nine nine for a free detailed discussion
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Disclaimer : The content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding your medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website.
Flu
Reasons for flagging
Hateful or abusive contentSpam or misleadingAdvertisement