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Penis head inserted vaginal for 10 seconds - HIV risk

I am a male living in Myanmar.

On Dec 28, 2021, I went to a massage parlour and the female masseuse gave me masturbation for about 5 minutes where we are in naked conditions. After that, I did oral to her female genital (cunnilingus) for about 30 seconds to 1 minute maximumly. Then, the head of my penis (glans part) was inserted into her vagina accidentally for about 10 seconds. I pulled it out afterwards and there was no ejaculation inside. But I guess that there might be some transparent fluid in her vagina and on my penis which are produced by arousal naturally. I didn't use condom or any protection.

After 29 hours of exposure, I took Zifam Eletec (Tenofovir Disoproxil Fumarate 300mg+Lamivudine 300mg+Efavirenz 600mg) and I had been taking it regularly at the same exact time every day (30 days course) which ended on Jan 27, 2022.

1. For my case, may I know the HIV infection risk/possibility for my exposure (because the HIV status of that female is unknown and contact time is short)?

2. One week after completing PEP, I suffered from low fever for 1 day, coughing, and sore throat for about 3 days. Could it be a symptom of PEP failure or just a common flu because it is winter season (Nov-Feb) in Myanmar?

3. I am planning to test HIV RNA PCR Test and HIV 1&2 Antibody Test on 40th day after PEP completion date. Would those tests on that 40th day can be considered conclusive?

Please help me out Sirs/Madams. I am very scared as this is the very first time which I had encountered such exposure in my life.

Thank you very much.
1 Responses
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3191940 tn?1447268717
COMMUNITY LEADER
This is a VERY low risk event.  10 seconds isn't really enough time to transmit anything, even if your partner was HIV+, and most people are NOT HIV+.

Symptoms of PEP failure would have lasted a lot longer than a few days, and would be more severe.  You probably just had a common virus.

Antibody-only tests are considered conclusive 12 weeks post-PEP, but in reality, are reliable a lot sooner than that. If you get a negative 40 days after PEP, the odds of it turning positive later are astronomical.
Helpful - 2
1 Comments
Thank you very much for your prompt answer Madam. Your response has made me relieved.
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