hiv_its_better_to_know

Early Symptoms of HIV - AIDS Infection

At Regent Street Clinic we see very many hundreds of people each year with worries about possible HIV exposure and then possible early HIV symptoms. The web is a fabulous resource but can terrify the life out of people who are perhaps feeling just a little guilty because they have had a sexual encounter they would not usually have, or have had sex with another outside their usual relationship.

In the UK the prevalence of HIV is actually very low indeed with around 100,000 out of 62 million people being infected. That gives a chance of meeting someone with HIV as 1:600. The risks of infection are very real and the illness is severe and very significant from all sorts of point of view, but looking at it in the cold light of day, the risk of HIV transmission amounts to a chance of less than 1% on any single occasion.

The symptoms of early HIV infection do not always appear. They probably appear to some degree in around 60 - 70 % of people, but very many people remain completely well. If they do appear then it is likely they will develop somewhere between 2 and 12 weeks after infection. Symptoms before this time are very rare indeed. The only sure way to diagnose HIV is with an HIV test.

Common HIV Questions:

Can I catch HIV from kissing?

No

Can I catch HIV from sucking a penis?

Catching HIV from sucking a penis is very, very unlikely. There are a few cases reported worldwide but the best studies show a minimal to zero risk. The risk will change if the guy being sucked ejaculates or "cums" into your mouth, but still the risk has shown to be small.

Can I catch HIV from being sucked?

This is even less likely than sucking. I'm not aware of any case reports or any personal knowledge of that.

Can I catch HIV from licking a vagina?

Again catching HIV from licking a vagina is very, very unlikely. The general consensus is that if the woman is bleeding then that will increase the risk but otherwise the risk is minimal.

If you are the female in this oral episode then there is virtually no risk of acquiring HIV this way.

Can I catch HIV from touching dried or cold semen - on a sex workers sheets or in a sex club?

No - not the most pleasant thing maybe but HIV is a fragile virus and requires ideal conditions to spread. Semen once dried or cold is not an HIV threat.

One thing you should remember is that other STDs are much more efficient at spreading than HIV. They will if present together, increase the risk of picking up HIV. Using condoms reduces the risk of these as well.

Symptoms of HIV

High fever
Sore throat
Headache
Rash
Chest infection or cough
Mouth ulcers
Diarrhoea
Vomiting
Large lymph glands in neck, armpits and groins
Pains in the joints or muscles

You can see that the symptoms of HIV infection are very similar to the symptoms of any disease caused by infection such as tonsillitis, chest infection, influenza etc. All of these are much more common and it is much more likely that if you do have these that they are not early symptoms of HIV but symptoms due to something else. Anxiety itself is a powerful condition and can persuade people that they have symptoms which in fact they don't.

The important thing is to avoid putting yourself in a position where you might have to worry about the early symptoms of HIV, in general this means using a condom for penetrative sex - whether anal or vaginal. If you use a condom and it stays on and does not rip then the chances of HIV infection are almost zero.

If you don't use a condom or it breaks then it might be an idea to consider using Post Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP). This is a one month course of anti-HIV medications designed to try to interrupt new infections with HIV.

It is best taken as early as possible after an unsafe episode. It is available from us, but is expensive privately, or free of charge from a GUM clinic or an Accident Dept in the UK.