When does AIDS early symptom appear
summary
Early symptoms of AIDS is a topic that everyone is very concerned about at present. Many friends who have high-risk experience can easily think of fever and other symptoms in the direction of AIDS after learning. So what are the early symptoms of AIDS? How are they classified in the current rigorous medical research.
When does AIDS early symptom appear
First: persistent low fever, fatigue, unexplained laryngitis, sudden weight loss of more than 10%, headache, nausea, muscle and joint pain, night sweats, persistent diarrhea, skin rash. These symptoms usually appear about 2 weeks after HIV infection.
Second: a part of acute infected people have cold like symptoms within 6 days to 6 weeks after HIV infection, such as fever, lymphadenopathy, pharyngitis, rash, myalgia or arthralgia, diarrhea, headache, weight loss, etc., which last for an average of two weeks, and can generally subside without special treatment. Of course, the emergence of these cases does not necessarily mean that they are infected with HIV, because other diseases can also have a similar situation.
Third: after the acute stage, the infected person turns into the asymptomatic infection stage. There were no other clinical symptoms or signs except for a few patients with persistent systemic lymphadenopathy (PGL). PGL refers to the enlargement of at least two non adjacent lymph nodes outside the inguinal lymph nodes, with a diameter of more than 1 cm. Cervical and axillary lymph node enlargement was more common. The period of asymptomatic infection in adults is generally 8-10 years.
matters needing attention
To the early stage of AIDS, infected people will appear continuous or intermittent systemic symptoms and "slight" opportunistic infection. Systemic symptoms include persistent systemic lymphadenopathy, fatigue, anorexia, fever, weight loss, night sweats, thrombocytopenia, etc. Mild infection is mainly manifested in oral cavity, skin and mucous membrane infection, including oral candidiasis, gingivitis, skin fungal infection, herpes zoster, folliculitis, pruritus dermatitis, etc.















