Lol dude. Relax. I'm not serious about the hiv thing. Just read. Hypothetical situation of gear being contaminated with something harmful bro. I'd never be concerned with anything I get from my sources. Now chill. Lol this is not me being concerned about my gear at all.I really like the source you rep for, but you spout of ignorance. It is impossible to contract HIV or any of the strains of HEP (a, b, or c) from a vial of gear. Neither of these viruses could survive in the solvents. Both of the viruses actually very fragile. HIV cannot survive in the presence of oxygen very long at all. The only way to contract HIV is thru unprotected sexual intercourse, or shared drug needles. In the past, it was transferred via blood transfusion. So, unless you are sharing your gear needles with an HIV positive person and doing the injection immediately after they pull it out of their body, then you are not at risk. The risk of bacterial infection is quite possible however, especially with poor quality UGL gear. This is usually evident by pain at the injection point, and can be visually displayed as red, and when infection sets in, it will hold fever and hot to the touch. Antibiotics will usually clear this up in a matter of a few days unless an abscess sets in, then you have bigger problems.
This is why people shouldn't use fly by night UGLS, or UGLS that haven't been in business but for a couple of years.
Now, relax, and put your mind at ease about HIV, impossible to contract thru a vial of gear with the solvent content. You can thank me later for the peace of mind.
do a little reading about HIV, it isn't a death sentence anymore.....so many people are so uneducated on the topic.
Sent from my SM-N910T using Tapatalk