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H. Hunter Handsfield, M.D.Blank Welcome back to the forum. This question has similarities to the one you asked two years ago, and the answer is much the same. Oral sex carries little or no risk for HIV transmission. One estimate, from CDC, indicates an approximate risk of 1 in 20,000 for oral to penile transmission, and 1 in 10,000 for penile to oral. Those figures are equivalent to receving BJs from infected partners once daily for 55 years, or giving BJs to infected men daily for 27 years, before transmission might be likely. Oral exposure to scant amounts of blood would make little or no difference in these risks. Finally, you describe a partner who is extremely unlikely to have HIV anyway -- so your actual risk from the events described are even lower than these figures. "Should I continue to worry?" Definitely not. "Is testing warranted?" On the basis of actual risk, definitely not. However, you might find a negative HIV test result more reassuring than anything I can say based on probability and statistics. If you do it, feel free to return to report the result. But stay mellow in the meantime. Assuming this is your only potential risk, you definitey can expect a negative result. Best wishes-- HHH, MD