Many people with HIV do not know they are infected.
- Many people do not develop symptoms after they first get infected
with HIV. Others have a flu-like illness within several days to weeks
after exposure to the virus. They complain of fever, headache,
tiredness, and enlarged lymph nodes in the neck. These symptoms usually
disappear on their own within a few weeks. After that, the person
feels normal and has no symptoms. This asymptomatic phase often lasts
for years.
- The progression of disease varies widely among individuals. This state may last from a few months to more than 10 years.
- During this period, the virus continues to multiply actively and infects and
kills the cells of the immune system.
- The virus destroys the cells that are the primary infection fighters, a type
of white blood cell called CD4 cells.
- Even though the person has no symptoms, he or she is contagious and can pass HIV to others through the routes listed above.
AIDS is the later stage of HIV infection, when the body begins losing its
ability to fight infections. Once the CD4 cell count falls low enough, an
infected person is said to have AIDS. Sometimes, the diagnosis of AIDS is made
because the person has unusual infections or cancers that show how weak the
immune system is.
- The infections that happen with AIDS are called opportunistic infections
because they take advantage of the opportunity to infect a weakened host. The
infections include (but are not limited to)
- A weakened immune system can also lead to other unusual conditions:
- lymphoma in (a form of cancer of the lymphoid tissue) the brain, which can cause fever and trouble thinking;
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