During an infection with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) the immune system is deregulated, even before real immunodeficiency, lymphopenia and AIDS occur. The immunologic alterations that have been described are a differentiation of a T-lymphocyte subclass, Th1 to Th0. Immunologic stimulation of these Th0 cells afterwards, makes them mature into Th2 cells. This causes a imbalance between the Th1 and Th2 cells, in favor of the second group. The clinical expression of this imbalance is an elevated risk of HIV-seropositive patients for allergies and for autoimmune disease, specially those autoimmune disease in which the production of autoantibodies prevails. Sometimes of differential diagnosis with systemic lupus erythematosus is difficult. There has been describes a major prevalence of allergic diseases, especially allergic rhinitis, in adult patients infected by HIV. Reports in pediatric patients are still sporadic, and the prevalence of allergies in children infected with HIV-AIDS is unknown. Only after recognizing the allergic nature of some symptoms, the treatment will be complete, reducing morbidity and infectious complications.