Signs
And Symptoms Of AIDSThe signs and symptoms of AIDS are varied and can
easily be mistaken for other illnesses. Approximately 1 to 4 weeks after infection
with HIV a certain percentage of patients will develop acute retroviral
syndrome (primary HIV infection). They complain of painful joints,
a fever,skin rashes and lymph gland swelling. This may resemble a flu or mononucleosis.
A few weeks after this syndrome disappears the patients develop antibodies to
HIV. The lymph glands stay enlarged, the patients are now asymptomatic HIV carriers.
When
the immune system is weakened enough after often several years of this asymptomatic
state, there are other symptoms and signs that occur as follows (Ref. 1, p. 1316
-1318). In the table below the most common signs and symptoms are compiled for
ease of reference.
| Common signs
and symptoms of AIDS | Non
specific AIDS signs and symptoms: fever, weight loss, persistent
thrush, recurrent herpes zoster, diarrhea, chronic tiredness, blood tests showing
anemia, low white blood cell counts and low platelet counts. |
| Neurological symptoms: These symptoms
are often found early and can consist of cognitive problems, seizures, gait problems,
pressure on peripheral nerves with loss of sensitivity or motor function problems. |
| Aseptic meningitis: This
may manifest itself by headaches, light sensitivity and fever. Lumbar puncture
is needed to further investigate. | Encephalitis
and opportunistic brain infections: It is not uncommon to have either
an HIV or CMV(=cytomegaly virus) infection of the brain tissue as the body's immune
system weakens. Confusion, loss of memory, headaches, myoclonic seizures, followed
by developing dementia are symptoms that point in that direction. Often both CMV
and HIV can infect the brain together . Toxoplasmosis encephalitis or cryptococcal,
histoplasmal and tuberculous meningitis are some of the opportunistic infections
of the brain or the meningeal membranes that can occur with AIDS. |
| Brain tumors: Primary non
Hodgkins lymphoma leads to focal symptoms depending on which of the cranial nerves
is affected. Otherwise systemic lymphomas like to affect the CNS secondarily. |
Skin symptoms: Often
there is an intermingling of HIV and other skin infections, particularly with
genital chancroid ulcers, frequently recurring genital herpes lesions or recurrent
herpes zoster. Any of these occurrences, skin yeast infections or any other skin
lesions that do not want to heal point to the possibility of underlying AIDS.
Kaposi's sarcoma is a purplish papule in the skin, which is caused by herpes virus
type 8, but facilitated by HIV through inhibition of the immune system. |
| Oral symptoms: Chronic thrush
from Candidiasis, recurrent herpes simplex lesions, hairy white patches of skin
on the side of the tongue (from Epstein Barr virus infection) are all indirect
pointers to do HIV blood tests on these patients and a high percentage of these
patients will have AIDS. Kaposi's sarcoma often also occurs in the mouth or on
the pharynx as a painless, purplish mass. | | Gastrointestinal
symptoms: One of the most common symptoms of AIDS patients is chronic
diarrhea and abdominal pain, which can be present for a variety of reasons. Candida
albicans infection, cytomegaly virus infection (=CMV), Salmonella and Clostridium
difficile are only a few of the problem bugs that contribute to chronic diarrhea.
Sometimes these pathogens coexist in the AIDS patient. The biliary tract can be
chronically infected by cryptosporidium or CMV. Pancreatitis and hepatitis can
be induced by some of the medicines that the AIDS patient has to swallow to combat
these infections. | | Lung symptoms:
The most common infection with AIDS is tuberculosis, but this may
get masked by the other pathogens that can be present at the same time. Pneumonia
with otherwise rare pathogens such as Pneumocystis carinii, Histoplasma, Cryptococcus,
Aspergillus and Coccidiosis species are common. In IV drug users bacterial pneumonias
with such as Pseudomonas, Haemophilus and pneumococci are common. Lung metastases
from Kaposi's sarcoma and non-Hodgkins lymphoma can occur as well. Symptoms are
varied like coughing, coughing up copious amounts of phlegm, fever, shortness
of breath and bluish discoloration from lack of oxygen uptake. |
| Cardiovascular symptoms: With
IV drug users there can be a fulminant infection in the heart valves (bacterial
endocarditis), which leads to a fever and sometimes to strokes. The physician
will hear a heart murmur. At times blood appears in the urine from clots in the
kidney. A cardiomyopathy can also be caused by HIV, which leads to congestive
heart failure. The symptoms of this are slowness of body movements, difficulties
climbing stairs due to shortness of breath, and poor skin color from lack of oxygen
perfusion. | | Kidney symptoms:
Kidney involvement is rare, but in blacks it is not uncommon, particularly
among heroin users. It is due to a socalled HIV-associated nephropathy, where
some capillaries of the filtration devices (glomerula) collapse and the kidneys
get enlarged. They are not doing their job of filtrating out the toxic substances
from the blood, which leads to tiredness and leakage of protein into the urine,
which can be measured along with blood tests. The kidneys deteriorate within only
a few months to end stage kidney failure. Unfortunately the prognosis is very
poor. |
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Disclaimer:
This outline is only a teaching aid to patients and should stimulate
you to ask the right questions when seeing your doctor. However, the responsibility
of treatment stays in the hands of your doctor and you. References: 1.The
Merck Manual, 7th edition, by M. H. Beers et al., Whitehouse Station, N.J., 1999.
Chapter 163. 2.James Chin et al., Editors: Control of Communicable Diseases
Manual, 17th edition, 2000, American Public Health Association. 3.The Merck
Manual, 7th edition, by M. H. Beers et al., Whitehouse Station, N.J., 1999. Chapter
164. 4. Feldman: Sleisenger & Fordtran's Gastrointestinal and Liver
Disease, 7th ed., © 2002 Elsevier : pages 1306-1307. Last
Modified: Feb. 13, 2012 | |
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