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HIV Infection and AIDS in Children

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KEY POINTS

  • HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is the virus that causes HIV infection and AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). With time, untreated HIV can weaken your child’s body’s ability to fight off certain serious infections and some cancers. When this happens, HIV infection becomes AIDS. AIDS can be life-threatening, but it is also a preventable and treatable disease.
  • Treatment for HIV/AIDS includes antiretroviral medicine and treatments to help prevent complications. Help your child take his or her anti-HIV drugs at the right time and in the right way.
  • Follow the full course of treatment prescribed by your child’s healthcare provider. Make sure you know when your child should come back for a checkup. Keep all appointments for provider visits or tests.

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What are HIV and AIDS?

HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) is the virus that causes HIV infection and AIDS (acquired immunodeficiency syndrome). HIV attacks the body's immune system. The immune system is the body's defense against infections. With time, untreated HIV can weaken your child’s body’s ability to fight off certain serious infections and some cancers. When this happens, HIV infection becomes AIDS. AIDS can be life-threatening, but it is also a preventable and treatable disease.

What is the cause?

HIV spreads from person to person when infected blood or body fluids, such as semen, vaginal fluid, or breast milk, enter the body. Men, women, and children of all ages can get HIV. You can get infected with HIV through:

  • Unsafe sex
  • Needles used by anyone other than you such as when injecting drugs, checking your blood glucose (sugar), or getting a tattoo
  • Transfusion of blood or blood products in countries where donated blood is not carefully tested

Babies can get infected before they are born or from the breast milk from an infected mother.

HIV is not spread through the air, in food, or by casual social contact such as shaking hands or hugging. HIV is not spread through saliva, sweat, or urine unless they are bloody.

What are the symptoms?

A baby born with HIV often has no signs of infection at birth. When these babies are 2 to 3 months old, they may start having problems such as:

  • Poor weight gain
  • Yeast infections that can cause constant diaper rash, and infections in the mouth and throat that make it hard to eat
  • Swollen lymph nodes
  • Swollen belly
  • Nervous system problems such as seizures or being slower to walk and talk than other children their age

A child with HIV tends to get more infections and get sicker than other children from common infections such as the flu.

Teens who get HIV may not have symptoms at the time of infection. It may take years for symptoms to show. During this time, they can spread the virus to others without knowing they have the virus.

When symptoms start, they are usually symptoms of the other diseases that are able to attack the body because of a weak immune system such as:

  • Fever
  • Loss of appetite or weight
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Feeling tired all the time
  • Swollen glands
  • Sore throat
  • Sores on the skin or in the mouth
  • Repeated, severe infections in the mouth or vagina even after treatment
  • Muscle and joint pain
  • Diarrhea
  • Headache
  • Blurry vision or other problems with vision

How is it diagnosed?

HIV is diagnosed with blood tests.

How is it treated?

Many new drug treatments and combinations are being prescribed. Medicines can slow down or stop the disease, and they can allow the body to start healing. Your child may need to have lab tests every few weeks or months to see how the virus is affecting your child’s body and how well the treatment is working.

There is no cure for HIV infection, but treatments can help your child live a normal, healthy, and long life. Treatment for HIV/AIDS includes antiretroviral medicine and treatments to help prevent complications.

To work properly, anti-HIV drugs need to be taken at the right time and in the right way. This can be hard for children. Kids may not want to take bad-tasting medicines or may not want to take medicines in front of other people. Talking with your child’s healthcare provider and support groups can help.

Some immunizations may be different for babies or children with HIV/AIDS. Children whose immune systems are very weak will not be given live virus vaccines such as measles-mumps-rubella (MMR), varicella (chickenpox), rotavirus, and flu vaccines that use a live virus.

Getting care in an office or clinic that offers expert HIV care and case management can be an important part of your child’s treatment. This means a team of providers and support staff will be giving your child care, and your child’s care will be coordinated by a case manager. The case manager will help you communicate with all who are caring for your child. Other advantages include:

  • Up-to-date medical care
  • Treatment for both the medical and social aspects of your child’s illness
  • Help in finding medical, social, and financial resources

How can I help take care of my child?

If your child has HIV or AIDS, here are some things you can do to take care of your child and help prevent problems.

Follow the full course of treatment prescribed by your child’s healthcare provider. In addition:

  • Give your child medicines exactly as prescribed. Know what to do if your child misses a dose.
  • Contact a local AIDS support network. Your provider should be able to help you find one.

Ask your provider:

  • How and when you will get your child’s test results
  • If there are activities your child should avoid and when your child can return to normal activities
  • How to take care of your child at home
  • What symptoms or problems you should watch for and what to do if your child has them

Make sure you know when your child should come back for a checkup. Keep all appointments for provider visits or tests.

How can I help prevent HIV and AIDS?

At this time, there is no vaccine to prevent HIV and AIDS. For now, you can help to protect your children from HIV by doing these things:

  • Every pregnant person should be tested for HIV. If you know you have HIV, talk to your healthcare provider before getting pregnant. You may be prescribed anti-HIV medicines to help prevent spread of the virus to the baby. The risk of spreading the infection to the baby can also be lowered by delivering the baby by C-section.
  • Babies born to persons with HIV may be treated with antiviral drugs for at least the first 6 weeks of life to help prevent infection. In developed countries such as the USA, mothers with HIV should not breastfeed their babies. Giving formula instead of breast milk helps prevent spread of the virus to the baby. Formula is safer if the water supply is safe. If the water supply is not safe, breast milk is safer, even from a mother who has HIV.
  • Begin to talk with your children early about drugs, sex, and HIV. If you are not sure what to say, ask your healthcare provider for help.
  • Teach your teenager to practice safe sex. Teach your teenager to use latex or polyurethane condoms the right way during foreplay and every time he or she has vaginal, oral, or anal sex, and to have just 1 sexual partner who is not sexually active with anyone else and who will use protection every time your teenager has sex.
  • If you learn that your child was sexually assaulted or that your teen had unprotected sex, seek medical care right away. There are medicines to help prevent HIV if your child has recently been exposed. You can also ask about protection from pregnancy at the time of the exam.

For more information, contact:

Developed by Change Healthcare.
Pediatric Advisor 2022.2 published by Change Healthcare.
Last modified: 2022-09-13
Last reviewed: 2019-03-04
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to change as new health information becomes available. The information is intended to inform and educate and is not a replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or treatment by a healthcare professional.
© 2022 Change Healthcare LLC and/or one of its subsidiaries
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