Six-month symptoms of AIDS

In fact, the vast majority of AIDS patients have no clinical symptoms when they have been infected for about six months. AIDS is actually divided into three stages: first, the acute shift HIV infection period; second, the asymptomatic HIV infection period; and third, only the real AIDS onset stage. In general, during the acute HIV infection period, patients will have flu-like symptoms for about half a month to a month, and this period can often slowly resolve on its own within a month. The patient’s acute HIV infection period can be passed in about a month, followed by the longer asymptomatic HIV infection period. The vast majority of patients have asymptomatic HIV infection for about 8-10 years, and some patients can maintain it for up to 20 years before entering the true onset of AIDS, although there are some patients for whom this period can only last a few months. Therefore, the vast majority of HIV patients have no clinical symptoms after six months of infection.