Aa
Aa
A
A
A
Close
Avatar universal

Acute HIV with Gonorrhea and Molloscum ?

Hello all I am so scared. The story I am about to tell is definitely gonna be a wild one.
So recently I started exploring with males and I am also into women. I mostly have done only oral with males but newly tried anal. So just to give a back story 4 weeks ago I was very wild. Within 3 days I had sex with 2 males and my long term gf.

So on the first day I had insertive protective sex with a male. I was the top; I used oil based lubricant (I didn't see any blood or any holes in the condom) and we had oral sex prior to starting. There was no ejaculation in the mouth. Then the next day I had started sex with my gf initially without a condom maybe only one or 2 pumps; and then proceeded to put a condom on (I didn't ejaculate in her and never do even with a condom) ....... and then after that I went had protected insertive sex with a confirmed negative partner.

So basically a two weeks later on the 10th I had sex with a male again and used a condom. He developed gonorrhea and a few days later I too developed gonorrhea. Got the Ceftriaxone shot and took Azithromycin and Cipro to be sure. Following that my gf called and suffered from a stomach virus (lasted all about 1 day) she had no fever and responded to normal diarrhea. She has since been complaining of excessive fatigue and not getting any sleep. Shoulder pain as well that lasted 1 day.

I reached out to both of male partners and both said they were negative. One even took a test in front of me. I also have tested negative recently. My tendons have been inflamed on and off. I have had no fever but now I have one little molloscum in my middle inner thigh and another on my left chest and also a slight headache. Am I infected? Will the next test show a positive result.

I have never been the receptive partner and I don't swallow semen. I promise that if the next test shows a positive I will tell all parties involved but right now I am just freaking out.
2 Responses
Sort by: Helpful Oldest Newest
Avatar universal
I am happy to report that I am negative. Most people never post their results. I am reporting this to let you know that no matter your symptoms. Stay optimistic and learn from this. I never said that in the first post I'm a 4th year MD student and I should have known better. No more unprotected sex for me. I encourage you all to protect your self and let the doctor do the diagnosing and know that regardless that its not a death sentence.
Helpful - 0
Avatar universal
There is an std forum for that info and condoms don't protect against all std.
Only HIV sex risks are unprotected anal or vaginal so if you did any of those there was a risk. Oral is not  risk. I didn't follow all your details and symptoms because most are irrelevant for HIV and the above is all you need to know.  You can test at 28 days post exposure for a conclusive result with a 4th gen test.
Helpful - 0
4 Comments
I guess I forgot to post that there was potential for "dipping" and that's where my concern lies.
Only you can determine if there was penetration. There is nothing else to say that isn't a repeat.
Thank you for talking. I have seen people get positive in 6 weeks and even 3 months on other forums. I'm just nervous also have peripheral neuropathy and had brain fog and etc.
Be cautious of anecdotal evidence. A guy here thought he proved that too, but kept ignoring that his earlier test was too soon.
Nothing else to say.
Have an Answer?

You are reading content posted in the HIV Prevention Community

Top HIV Answerers
366749 tn?1544695265
Karachi, Pakistan
370181 tn?1595629445
Arlington, WA
Learn About Top Answerers
Didn't find the answer you were looking for?
Ask a question
Popular Resources
Condoms are the most effective way to prevent HIV and STDs.
PrEP is used by people with high risk to prevent HIV infection.
Can I get HIV from surfaces, like toilet seats?
Can you get HIV from casual contact, like hugging?
Frequency of HIV testing depends on your risk.
Post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) may help prevent HIV infection.