tested positive for hiv?
treat early and live a long normnal healthy life !

 we know that treatment keeps your immune system healthy and reduces the risk of developing health conditions associated with HIV.
Treatment can also lower the viral load of HIV in your blood to virtually undetectable levels, and research from two international studies, PARTNER and Opposites Attract show that HIV positive men who are on treatment and have an undetectable viral load (UVL) do not transmit HIV to their partners.

more to know about syphilis

Getting It


It can be easily passed on through direct contact such as toucnhing, kissing,  oral and anal sex, as well as blood-to-blood contact, like sharing needles.

It’s especially infectious when there is any contact with painless syphilis sores/lesions, whether that’s through fucking, sucking or picking it up on your hands and touching yourself. Remember that syphilis sore is painless so the guy who has it doesn't even feel it.

Symptoms and TestinG


The symptoms of syphilis generally occur in three stages. The first occurs within the first three months of infection. Generally there are no symptoms, but if there are generally it is a few red sores on your cock, balls, arse, mouth or your throat. They are often painless and disappear after a few weeks.

If left untreated, some can experience a red rash on the palms of your hands or soles of your feet, or even on any other part of your body. Some may even experience swollen glands or a sore throat. Left untreated in the long term, syphilis can potentially do damage to your internal organs and the brain.

For HIV positive men, a syphilis test should be done each time a viral load test is done.

For neg guys, a syphilis test should be done if there is any raw sex, group sex or have had a high numbers of partners.

treat early gives many benefits

Caught early, syphilis is easily treated with a course of antibiotics. This means testing regularly is crucial if you want to treat it in the first stage.

A blood test is the common way of diagnosing syphilis, but your doctor or nurse might also take a swab of any sores (chancres) or lesions that you have.

The longer it remains in the body, the harder syphilis is to treat – many of the effects caused by the third stage are irreversible.

Once treated, a person is likely to always test positive for syphilis – even though they don’t have it any more and so cannot transmit it- this is normal, and your doctor should explain this to you. Other tests exist to check whether you have been reinfected.

managing it

After the treatment is done for yourself you need to follow up with your doctor by doing blood test called VDRL titer or RPR titer every 3 months for 1 full year to make sure that the treatment was successful and syphilis doesn't come back.
You also must tell your partners in the last 90 days to go and get tested or treatment to protect our community from having syphilis everywhere.

getting TEST&treat at pulse clinic

Contact PULSE CLINIC in each locations here:
https://www.pulse-clinic.com/locations/