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Unprotected Oral (giving and receiving) a few days ago.

Hi, Stupidly I saw a working girl on Monday and performed unprotected oral on her, and she did on me, there was no ejaculation and I'm now very worried as although there was no intercourse I got the feeling if there was she would not have used protection, and it worries me how many people she has had unprotected sex with. I am diabetic type 2, and have noticed small red dots on my penis (though if I'm honest, they were there before, don't hurt and only appear for a few days after sex or masturbation) no pain, and think I'm just making myself Ill by worrying about it. Could anyone suggest any ideas please? Thanks
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207091 tn?1337709493
COMMUNITY LEADER
If you have diabetes, you should be taking social distancing a little more seriously. I mean, just saying.

So receiving unprotected oral sex puts you at risk for syphilis, genital herpes type 1, gonorrhea and NGU.

Syphilis isn't that common, and your partner would have had to have a sore in their mouth to transmit it. You wouldn't see symptoms of this for 10-90 days, but the average is 21 days, and you'd get a sore called a chancre. This doesn't cause burning, pain, discharge, etc. You can test for this at 6 weeks. If you get symptoms, but test negative at 6 weeks, test again at 90 days, and get to the doctor as soon as you see symptoms.

If you don't already have herpes type 1 (think oral sores, like cold sores but not canker sores), then you could get genital herpes type 1 from receiving oral sex. This can happen even if the person performing oral doesn't have a sore, but it's more likely if they do. The time from infection to symptoms is usually 2-12 days, but the average is 4 days. You can test for this now, and then again at 4 months to make sure you don't have it. If you test positive now, it's a pre-existing infection that you had before this encounter. About half the adult population has this, and 90% don’t know it. Ask for a type specific IgG blood test.

You'd see symptoms of gonorrhea at about 2-5 days, and this would usually be a discharge, burning, etc. Some people don't get symptoms. You can test for this as early as 3 days, but 5 days is better. You can have a urine test or a swab test.

NGU is an infection in the urethra that is caused by anything other than gonorrhea (nongonococcal urethritis urethritis, sometimes called NSU, for non-specific). This can be caused by normal mouth bacteria entering the urethra, and the symptoms and testing times are the same as gonorrhea.


Giving oral sex to someone with a penis puts you at risk for oral gonorrhea and syphilis. Syphilis isn't that common, and your partner would have had to have a sore that your mouth came into contact with to transmit it. You would get a sore in your mouth anywhere from 10-90 days, with 21 days being the average. You can test for this at 6 weeks.

Oral gonorrhea doesn't usually have symptoms, but if you got them, it would be a sore, red throat, maybe a fever, maybe swollen glands. If you get symptoms, they usually appear within 7-21 days. You can get a throat swab for this at about 5 days.

There is a risk here, but oral sex is lower risk than intercourse.

Giving oral sex to someone with a vagina is is far lower risk than a penis, but the same risks apply.


And really, think about that social distancing.

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1 Comments
Thankyou, I shall, and I am.
Avatar universal
1) symptoms might not appear so soon
2) your symptoms may or may not be due to STDs
3) you are at risk of STDs during your oral sex. Please get tested, for the sake of your own health
Good luck
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1 Comments
Thankyou
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