I'm a 25 year old gay male in Asia, and I took OraQuick Advanced HIV-I/II test with blood on May 17. There was a very faint red line next to T and very
clearClear by design
Clear eyes
Clear eyes acr
Clear eyes clr
Clear-atadine
Clear-atadine children's red line next to C. The doctor said that this is positive, and he usually sees that when people are seroconverting. By the time 40 minutes had passed, the line got just a bit darker, but still very faint, almost grey. They drew my blood, and sent it to the city health department here. They did Western Blot, and it was indeterminate. So my blood was sent to the US equivalent of CDC. They did WB (indeterminate) and an
antigenCea
Histocompatibility antigen test
Hla-b27 antigen
Psa test (negative). I talked to the person who did the test, and she told me the bands on WB were very faint, but she does think I'm seroconverting. I was asked to provide blood sample again in 2 weeks. I got nervous, and did another OraQuick test without blood at a local clinic. (This was 10 days after the 1st OraQuick) There was a faint line, fainter than the 1st OraQuick. This time, the doctor (different doctor than the fist one) said he would read that as negative, since it was extremely faint, and last time I had
sexBuccal smear
Causes of sexual dysfunction
Child abuse - sexual
Delayed ejaculation
Erection problems
Female sexual dysfunction
Inhibited sexual desire
Orgasmic dysfunction
Puberty and adolescence
Rape
Safe sex was over 4 weeks ago, I would have enough antibodies to make that line
clearClear by design
Clear eyes
Clear eyes acr
Clear eyes clr
Clear-atadine
Clear-atadine children's.
Last time I did something unsafe was about 6 months ago-- this guy inserted his
penisCancer - penis
Curvature of the penis
Penis care (uncircumcised)
Penis pain without a
condomCondoms
Female condoms for like 15 seconds, but no ejaculation. Last time I had sex was 4 weeks before the first OraQuick test. I did use a condom. I’d like to know..
-if negative people ever get those really really faint lines, ones you see if you look at it closely from like 5 inches away (and if this is common?) or nothing no matter how close
-I did have flu-like symptoms from April 7-18 (sore throat+fever, but no runny nose). Could it be possible that my body has antibodies for influenza which is cross reacting?
-if I caught HIV 4 weeks before WB, wouldn't I have gotten reaction on WB and also a rather clear line on OraQuick?
Thank you!
Also, what's the window period for Western Blot?
Thank you!
The western bloot follows about the same time line as other blood tests. EWH
One last question though-- if WB was indeterminate because I'm seroconverting, shouldn't the antigen test have been positive??
Thanks.
So I got my blood drawn today (6/2), and ELISA came back positive. They told me it was 14.76 and the cut off is 1. I don't really know the unit, but that seems to exclude the possibility of being false positive. :( I'm still waiting for PCR and Western Blot result.
For what it's worth, this is my history:
Before 3/30 - don't remember
3/30: anal sex w/A (used a condom but with lotion)
4/6: anal sex w/B (used a condom)
4/7-18: fever+sore throat
4/27 oral sex w/B
5/1 sauna (used a condom. pretty sure. but was drunk)
5/17 HIV test - OraQuick positive (faint line w/blood), antigen negative, WB indeterminate
5/27 oraquick #2 - OraQuick Positive (faint line w/ oral serum)
6/2 ELISA positive (14.76, cut-off is 1)
So I'm guessing fever from 4/7 to 4/18 was ARS, and I probably contracted HIV on 3/30, unless I had sex shortly before 3/30 which I don't remember.... WB was probably indetermiante because it was a recent infection, and antigen was probably negative because it has been 4+ weeks since exposure. I honestly don't know what happened considering I consider myself as practicing safe sex.
I have my last question for you-- assuming that I'm positive (which seems more likely than not), and that this was an early infection (judging from the indeterminate WB from 5/17), do you usually recommend taking meds immediately in this sort of a situation? I've read some articles talking about how taking meds for a short period of time (a few months) in the early stage of the infection may slow down the HIV progress in the long run.
Of course, I will obtain a local HIV specialist's advice on this matter, but I wanted to know what the consensus was among the doctors in the U.S.