Last week, I lost a 35-year-old patient to AIDS.
The worst part? He had no idea he was even sick. From history we got to know, he was having recurrent fevers for many years, lost a few kilos, he used to just pop a paracetamol, and go back to work. He thought he was just tired from life.
By the time he reached our hospital, it was already too late
He didnโt look like the dying patients you see in movies. He looked like any other guy.
But internally, he was fighting a war for maybe a decade? without any weapons.
When his labs came back, his CD4 count (the soldiers of the immune system)was less than 50.
A healthy person has 500โ1,500. He had almost nothing left.
HIV is a very manageable condition today. ART (Antiretroviral Therapy) works wonders, it can make the virus undetectable and let you live a full, normal life..
But the medicine only works if you recognize the signs early. If you wait until the house is already burned down, there is very little we can do..
Let me quickly brief you the stages of HIV
First: The "Flu"
2โ4 weeks after exposure, you get a fever, sore throat, or a rash. It feels like a standard viral bug. You "recover" in a week and think you are fine.
Stage 1: The Silence (Clinical Latency)
This is where my patient lived for years.
The virus reproduces slowly. You have zero symptoms. You feel healthy. Maybe a random fever once a year that you blame on the weather.
Because you feel fine, you never get tested. This is the most dangerous stage because you are still infectious and don't even know it.
You might have Persistent Generalized Lymphadenopathy-swollen, painless lymph nodes in the neck or armpits for >3 months.
Most ignore these!
Stage 2: Mild Symptoms
The immune system is starting to slip.
Look for:
>Moderate unexplained weight loss (<10% of body weight).
>Recurrent URIs (sinusitis, tonsillitis, otitis media).
>Herpes Zoster (Shingles)
>Minor skin issues (Seborrheic dermatitis, fungal nail infections).
Stage 3: Advanced Symptoms
The breaking point is near. This is where symptoms become hard to ignore:
>Unexplained severe weight loss (>10% of body weight).
>Chronic diarrhea or persistent fever
>Oral Candidiasis (Thrush).
>Pulmonary TB.
Stage 4: AIDS (Severe Symptoms)
This is the stage my patient was in.
CD4 count <200 plus "AIDS-defining" conditions like HIV wasting syndrome, Pneumocystis pneumonia (PCP), or extrapulmonary TB.
By the time he reached us, he had opportunistic pneumonia. Without an immune system, even the strongest antibiotics can't save you.
He succumbed last week because he spent years managing symptoms with paracetamol instead of finding the cause.
In 2026, no one should be dying of AIDS. Don't trust the mirror. Trust a blood test. It's the only way to know before it's too late
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(Source: DD News)
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