Do people with AIDS get muscle aches and pains?

AIDS patients may have muscle aches and pains, for example, when AIDS patients have fever, it can cause muscle aches and pains all over the body, and it can also cause muscle aches and pains due to infected muscles, and in the acute stage of HIV, viremia can also cause muscle aches and pains, but muscle aches and pains is not a specific symptom of AIDS, and it is not possible to diagnose the patient with AIDS through muscle aches and pains if the patient has muscle aches and pains after high-risk behaviors. Muscle pain is not a specific symptom of AIDS. In order to diagnose whether a patient is infected with HIV, blood should be drawn to check whether there are HIV antigens and antibodies in the patient’s body, so as to ascertain whether the patient is infected with HIV. If you have muscle aches and pains after being diagnosed with HIV, you should go to the hospital to find out the cause of the muscle aches and pains and whether there is any opportunistic infection, and then use medication to treat the infection as soon as possible.