Any fluid in the human body, such as blood, urine, saliva (spit), sputum, tears, semen, mother's milk, or vaginal secretions. Only blood, semen, mother's milk, and vaginal secretions have been linked directly to the transmission of HIV.
Blood, semen, vaginal secretions, urine, feces, saliva and/or tears.
Jin ye is one of the Substances. Jin is body fluids that are thin,light, clear and watery and go to skin and muscles. Ye are body fluids that are turbid, heavy and dense and that moisten joints, spine, brain, bone marrow and sense organs.
Any fluid in the human body including blood, urine, saliva, tears, semen, vaginal secretions and breast milk. HIV needs to infect certain cells in the body - especially CD4 cells - so fluids that contain higher levels of those cells will have levels of HIV that make it infectious (able to be passed to another person). The body fluids that can pass HIV to another person are blood, semen, vaginal secretions and, less often, breast milk, especially when blood is found in breast milk as a result of dry or cracked nipples occurring during breastfeeding.
Body fluids can be found on many restroom surfaces. Urine, perspiration, blood, saliva and vomit are examples of body fluids that are deposited in a public restroom. These body fluids can contain a variety of harmful germs. Care should be taken when cleaning up any body fluid. Bowl Brush – Bowl brush is a tool used to scrub out toilets. It is more aggressive than the bowl swab, but is sometimes needed when toilets are heavily soiled. The first choice for scrubbing out toilets or urinals is to use the bowl swab. See Bowl Swab.
include saliva, blood, vaginal secretions, and semen (ejaculate/cum)
fluids such as blood, semen, vaginal fluids, saliva. Contact with the body fluids of an infected person puts a person at risk of a number of serious sexually transmitted infections such as HIV and hepatitis.
a group of fluids made within the body, usually blood, saliva, semen, and urine.
Fluids of the human body. Body fluids identified with HIV transmission are blood, semen, vaginal secretions, breast milk, and other body fluids containing blood (fluid surrounding the brain and spinal cord, bone joints and that found in the uterus surrounding the unborn baby).
Any fluid secreted from or contained within the body.
Term used for a number of fluids manufactured within the body. Usually used when referring to semen, blood, urine, and saliva.