If AIDS patients are treated when AIDS is first detected, their survival period can actually be close to that of a normal person. This is because early treatment by taking antiviral drugs to inhibit the replication of the virus can make the virus in the patient’s body lower than the lower limit of detection in a very short period of time, and the virus basically does not have a great impact on the patient’s immune function. The patient’s CD4+ T-lymphocyte count can be in the normal state for a long time, so the patient is not easy to secondary infections, and at the same time, the chance of malignant tumors, Kaposi’s sarcoma and so on will be lower than the ordinary AIDS patients, so the survival period will naturally be longer, but of course, compared with the normal people there will be some effects.