In the acute phase, AIDS patients may have symptoms such as fever, malaise, sore throat, general malaise and rash; some patients may also have no obvious symptoms and may go directly from the acute phase to the asymptomatic phase.
Two to four weeks after HIV infection, some patients can enter the acute phase and develop some clinical symptoms. In the acute phase, the most common clinical manifestation of this disease is fever, which may be accompanied by obvious general malaise, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, headache, myalgia, pharyngolaryngeal pain, arthralgia, hyperhidrosis, skin rash, enlarged lymph nodes and other symptoms.
Clinically, there are also some patients who have no obvious symptoms in the acute phase, and it is difficult for patients to self-recognize and directly transfer from the acute phase to the asymptomatic phase.
If you have any suspicion of HIV infection, please go to the hospital as soon as possible for examination, clear diagnosis, and treatment under the guidance of the doctor.