Symptoms of AIDS appear in the first few days

The earliest days for AIDS to show symptoms are related to the individual constitution of the patient. Usually, most AIDS patients will show signs of acute infection within two to four weeks after contracting the virus.
HIV is transmitted sexually, through blood, and from mother to child. Due to individual differences, some HIV-infected patients experience symptoms within a few weeks, while others take several years or more to develop symptoms.
Some AIDS patients can show symptoms in as early as two weeks, which is usually the acute stage of AIDS, and patients will have fever, headache, fatigue, nausea, skin rash, swollen lymph nodes and other symptoms.
So, when the earliest symptoms of AIDS will appear varies from person to person. If symptoms do not appear for a long time, AIDS cannot be ruled out, and you need to go to the hospital for a blood test, and you can consult a professional physician for advice.