Wearing a condom means wearing a condom during sexual intercourse, which may or may not infect you with AIDS. The most common route of transmission of AIDS is sexual transmission. Although wearing a condom during sexual intercourse can prevent the spread of AIDS to a certain extent, it does not necessarily mean that you will not be infected with the AIDS virus. Therefore, it is not recommended to take chances, and you should avoid frequent changes of sexual partners and unclean sexual intercourse.
1. You may be infected with AIDS:
AIDS is mainly transmitted through sexual contact, blood transmission, and mother-to-child transmission. Condoms can avoid direct sexual contact to a certain extent, but if condoms are used improperly, damaged, or slipped during sexual intercourse, direct sexual contact may occur, and you may be infected with AIDS at this time.
2. You may not be infected:
If both parties who have sex do not have AIDS and use condoms from the beginning of sexual intercourse, there is a high probability that AIDS will not occur.
If your sexual partner is infected with the AIDS virus, you may experience symptoms such as fever, sore throat, night sweats, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, rash, joint pain, and swollen lymph nodes. At this time, blocking drugs should be taken within 24-72 hours after contact, such as lopinavir-ritonavir tablets, raltegravir potassium tablets, etc. The earlier the blocking drugs are taken, the better the effect.