World AIDS Day is on Saturday 1st December 2012 and the theme for this year is “Getting to Zero: Zero new HIV infections. Zero deaths from AIDS-related illness. Zero discrimination”.
The first recognized cases of AIDS (Acquired Immunodeficiency Virus) occurred in the USA in the early 1980’s where people were developing rare opportunistic infections that were resistant to any treatment. The Human Immunodeficiency virus (HIV) was discovered soon afterwards and it was found HIV causes AIDS.
HIV is a virus most commonly caught by having unprotected sex, sharing infected needles and other injecting treatment to inject drugs. The virus attacks the immune system and weakens your ability to fight infections and disease. AIDS is the final stage of HIV infection when your body can no longer fight life-threatening infections. There is no cure for HIV but drugs are available which enable most people to live a long and healthy life.
HIV is found in the bodily fluids (semen, vaginal fluids, blood, inside the anal passage and in breast milk) of an infected person. HIV cannot be spread by saliva alone but it can be spread if the saliva contains other bodily fluids or blood. The most common way of getting HIV in the UK is from unprotected sexual contact with a person who has HIV. Other ways include sharing needles and drug equipment, transmission from a mother to baby during birth or from breast feeding if the mother is HIV infected.
There are 33.3 million people in the world infected with HIV. 22.4 million of these people are in sub-Saharan Africa and the Caribbean is the second most affected region in the world. In the developed world, the USA has the most severe HIV epidemic.
80% of people who become infected with HIV experience a short flu-like illness or known as a seroconversion illness that occurs 2 to 6 weeks after infection. Symptoms of this seroconversion illness can include:
These symptoms can be seen in many other illnesses like flu and colds but if a patient experiences several of these symptoms and feels they have been at risk of HIV infection then they should be tested for HIV. It should be remembered that once a person has been in contact with HIV it can take up to 3 months for the HIV test to show a positive result if the person is infected. Once the seroconversion illness has happened a person may not show any other symptoms for up to 10 years.
Differential diagnosis of diseases occurring with similar symptoms to those the seroconversion illness can present with.
If left untreated HIV weakens the ability to fight infection and a person becomes vulnerable to serious illnesses. This stage of illness if known as AIDS or late-stage HIV infection. A person experiencing late-stage HIV infection may exhibit symptoms of:
At this stage the person is at risk of developing life-threatening diseases like tuberculosis, pneumonia and some cancers. Many of these can be treated and if the person is on HIV medication then this increases their ability to fight these infections.
However there is no room for complacency as there is still plenty more to do across reducing HIV infection in all transmission groups and age populations to reach “Zero new HIV infections. Zero deaths from AIDS-related illness. Zero discrimination”.