Prevent HIV Transmission
Prevent HIV Transmission
Prevent HIV Transmission
What is HIV?
To learn more about the history of HIV in the United States and CDC’s response
to the epidemic, see CDC’s HIV and AIDS Timeline.
The only way to know for sure whether you have HIV is to get tested. Knowing
your HIV status helps you make healthy decisions to prevent getting or
transmitting HIV.
Fever,
Chills,
Rash,
Night sweats,
Muscle aches,
Sore throat,
Fatigue,
Swollen lymph nodes, and
Mouth ulcers.
But some people may not feel sick during acute HIV infection. These symptoms
don’t mean you have HIV. Other illnesses can cause these same symptoms.
See a health care provider if you have these symptoms and think you may have
been exposed to HIV. Getting tested for HIV is the only way to know for sure.
When people with HIV don’t get treatment, they typically progress through three
stages. But HIV medicine can slow or prevent progression of the disease. With the
advancements in treatment, progression to Stage 3 is less common today than in
the early days of HIV.
People have a large amount of HIV in their blood. They are very
contagious.
Some people have flu-like symptoms. This is the body’s natural response to
infection.
But some people may not feel sick right away or at all.
If you have flu-like symptoms and think you may have been exposed to
HIV, seek medical care and ask for a test to diagnose acute infection.
Only antigen/antibody tests or nucleic acid tests (NATs) can diagnose acute
infection.
Stage 2: Chronic HIV Infection