Friday, October 22, 2010

How could hiv lives contained by an infected needle/syringe ? Shouldn't it die contained by second after departing the body ?

How could hiv lives contained by an infected needle/syringe ? Shouldn't it die contained by second after departing the body ?
No... HIV is not a bacterial infection. It is a virus. The problem is the sharing of needles when using. Blood does not go dry contained by seconds so the HIV will still be present.
is still infected fabric within that syringe Human Immunodeficiency Virus is just that a virus smaller than any microbes and it lives in that bits and pieces inside the needle.
This is what I contemplate, I think hiv cannot survive contained by open nouns, but when you use a needle/syringe there is still some blood inside the nozzle (like when they do blood work on you in the hospital the hypodermic is kinda like a pump, it also pumps drugs into you, so since its inside something its not technically contained by open nouns and thus the blood retains enough moisture to gross hiv thrive long enough for it to be injected surrounded by someone elses vein.
The Human Immunodeficiency Virus is fragile. Once the virus is outside the body within a dry form, it dies immediately. Even surrounded by a wet state, it does not live long when exposed to boil, detergents, or disinfectants. When stored in blood bank at 4°C, it can live for about 3 weeks (or longer), or till the white cell disintegrates, but contained by a frozen state it can survive for years.
the HIV virus if exposure to air, it dies in 15sec. Now your question is in the region of HIV living in a syringe and that is consider a closed-air container, it could live up to 2 weeks and possibly even more. You should also consider HepC virus living in a syringe.

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