There are not many people who have no symptoms in the early stage of AIDS, about 20% of them. Most of the AIDS patients will have symptoms such as fever and rash in the early stage, but whether they will have symptoms or not also depends on the individual’s physical condition. Therefore, if you have a history of close contact with AIDS patients, you can go to the hospital for timely screening, such as HIV antibody test and HIV nucleic acid test. AIDS presents a phased development. Within 2-4 weeks of the initial stage of AIDS, representative early symptoms will usually appear, such as fever, similar to a cold, along with nausea, vomiting, night sweats, sore throat, rash, and other symptoms. The asymptomatic period usually lasts for 6-8 years, during which the HIV virus replicates in the body and damages the immune system until symptoms such as prolonged fever, night sweats, and weight loss occur, which can be accompanied by various opportunistic infections and tumors. Therefore, if you are in the initial stage of HIV infection, you need to seek medical attention in a timely manner and take regular medication for HIV treatment under the professional guidance of a doctor, which can suppress and reduce the viral load to the maximum extent. If the medication is taken regularly for a long period of time and there is no drug resistance, there is almost no significant difference between the survival time of patients and normal people.