Information:
AIDS (acquired immune deficiency syndrome) is the name for a collection of serious illnesses caused by the HIV virus.
AIDS is now often called late-stage or advanced HIV. In the UK, most people being treated for HIV do not develop AIDS.
Go to a sexual health clinic if:
- you think you’ve been exposed to the HIV virus in the last 72 hours
The virus can be spread by having vaginal, anal or oral sex without a condom or by sharing needles with someone who has HIV.
Staff at the clinic should be able to offer you emergency HIV medicine, which may stop you getting infected.
You can also get emergency HIV medicine from your nearest A&E.
Symptoms of HIV infection
The symptoms of HIV are different for everyone.
Some people experience a short flu-like illness around 2 to 6 weeks after HIV infection.
This can include:
- a sore throat
- a high temperature
- swollen glands
- muscle aches and tiredness
- a skin rash
However, these symptoms can also be caused by lots of common conditions.
You may not have any other symptoms of HIV for years. This means many people with HIV do not know they have it.
If HIV is not treated, it damages your immune system and may eventually cause more serious illnesses, such as tuberculosis, pneumonia or cancer. This is known as advanced HIV, late-stage HIV or AIDS.
Information:
Find out more
- Stages of HIV (Terrence Higgins Trust)
Causes of HIV infection
HIV is most often spread by having vaginal, anal or oral sex with someone who has HIV, while not using a condom.
This is because HIV is spread by infected body fluids getting into your bloodstream. This includes blood, semen, vaginal fluids and mucus from inside the anus.
It can also be spread:
- by sharing needles, syringes or other equipment for injecting drugs with someone who has a detectable viral load
- by sharing sex toys with someone who has a detectable viral load
- to your baby during pregnancy or birth if you have a detectable viral load
You cannot get HIV from kissing, hugging or shaking hands, or from sharing toilet seats, food, drinks, or normal everyday household items like cups and cutlery.
Important
If you’re having effective treatment for HIV and have an undetectable viral load (an extremely low level of the HIV virus in your blood), you cannot pass the HIV virus onto someone else.
