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Additional Information
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What is hepatitis?
Hepatitis means liver inflammation. Viral hepatitis means
that a person has liver inflammation due to a virus. Viral
infection of the liver makes the liver swell up and stop
working well. The liver is an important organ. It helps your
body with these functions:
- Digests food
- Stores energy
- Removes poisons
There are five types of viral hepatitis. The most common
types in the United States are viral hepatitis A, B, and
C.
What are the signs of viral hepatitis?
Some people with viral hepatitis have no signs of the infection.
For other people, these signs might occur:
- Low grade fever
- Headache
- Muscle aches
- Tiredness
- Loss of appetite
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Diarrhea
- Dark-colored urine and pale bowel movements
- Pain in the stomach
- Skin and whites of the eyes turning yellow, also called
jaundice
What are the types of viral hepatitis?
Hepatitis A
- How you get it: Eating food or drinking
water contaminated with feces, or the bowel movement (BM),
from a person infected with the hepatitis A virus (HAV).
It can also be caused by anal-oral contact. Some examples
include:
- Eating food contaminated by a person with hepatitis A
who prepares food. It can happen if the person did not
wash his hands after using the bathroom and then touched
the food.
- From infected household members or sexual partners
- Diaper changing tables, if not cleaned properly
- Eating raw selfish that came from sewage-contaminated
water
- What it does to your body: While it
can cause swelling of the liver, it doesn't normally cause
permanent liver damage.
- Treatment: It usually gets better on
its own. Almost everyone who gets hepatitis A gets better.
- Prevention:
- Get the hepatitis A vaccine. The vaccine is given in
two doses, 6 to 18 months apart. The vaccine is recommended
for the following groups:
- Travelers to areas with high rates of hepatitis A
- Men who have sex with men
- Injecting and non-injecting drug users
- Persons with clotting factor disorders, like hemophilia
- People with chronic liver disease
- Children who live in areas that had historically high
rates of hepatitis A from 1987-1997
- Get an immune globulin (IG) shot for short-term protection.
If you’re traveling to a place where hepatitis A
is common and leaving in less than 4 weeks, an IG shot
can temporarily keep you from getting the virus. An IG
shot can also be given within 2 weeks after exposure to
hepatitis A.
- Be careful about drinking the tap water when traveling
internationally.
- Wash your hands with soap and water after using the toilet,
changing a diaper, and before preparing and eating food.
- People who get hepatitis A once will not get it again.
Hepatitis B
- How you get it: Contact with a person
infected with the hepatitis B virus (HBV). This can occur
through having sex with an infected person, from an infected
mother to her baby during childbirth, or through sharing
needles with an infected person.
- What it does to your body: The liver
swells, and liver damage can occur. Most people will get
rid of the virus after a few months. Some people are not
able to get rid of the virus, which makes the infection
chronic, or life-long. This may lead to a scarring of the
liver, called cirrhosis, liver failure, and can also lead
to liver cancer.
- Treatment: Acute hepatitis B usually
gets better on its own. Most people develop immunity to
the virus and after recovery, can’t give it to others.
Someone with chronic (long-term) hepatitis B still carries
the virus and can pass it to others. Chronic hepatitis
B can be treated with the drugs interferon, lamivudine,
or adefovir. These drugs do not work for everyone.
- Prevention:
- Get the hepatitis B vaccine. The vaccine is usually given
through 3 injections over 6 months. The vaccine is recommended
for the following groups:
- All girls and boys from 0 to 18 years old
- A person whose sex partner has chronic hepatitis B
- Men who have sex with men
- Someone who has been recently diagnosed with a sexually
transmitted disease
- People with multiple sex partners
- Someone who shoots drugs
- Someone who lives with a person with chronic hepatitis
B
- People whose jobs expose them to human blood
- If you are having sex, but not with one steady partner,
use latex condoms correctly and every time you have sex.
Using condoms may lower your risk of getting hepatitis
B.
- Don't share anything that could have an infected person's
blood on it, like toothbrushes, razors, nail clippers,
or washcloths.
- Consider the risks if you are thinking about getting
a tattoo or body piercing. You might get infected if the
tools have someone else's blood on them or if the artist
or piercer does not follow good health practices.
- If you are a health care or public safety worker, get
vaccinated against hepatitis B, and always follow routine
barrier precautions and safely handle needles and other
sharp objects.
- People with hepatitis B should not donate blood, organs,
or tissue.
- Do not shoot drugs. If you shoot drugs, stop and get
into a treatment program. If you can't stop, never share
drugs, needles, syringes, water, or "works," and get vaccinated
against hepatitis A and B.
- If exposed to hepatitis B, get a hepatitis B immune globulin
injection within 14 days following exposure, and begin
the hepatitis B vaccine series.
- If you are pregnant, get a blood test for hepatitis B.
Infants born to infected mothers should be given hepatitis
B immune globulin and vaccine within 12 hours after birth.
- If you have chronic hepatitis B, make sure your babies
get all of their hepatitis B shots with the last shot at
6 months of age.
Hepatitis C
- How you get it: Most often through sharing
injection drugs with a person infected with the hepatitis
C virus (HCV). Many people don’t have symptoms and
don’t know they have it.
- What it does to your body: Causes swelling
of the liver and liver damage. Most people who are infected
with HCV develop a chronic infection. This might lead to
scarring of the liver, called cirrhosis, liver failure,
and can also lead to liver cancer.
- Treatment: In some cases, it gets better
on its own. The current treatment of choice is combination
therapy using pegylated interferon and ribavirin.
- Prevention:
- Do not shoot drugs. If you shoot drugs, stop and get
into a treatment program. If you can't stop, never share
drugs, needles, syringes, water, or "works," and get vaccinated
against hepatitis A and B.
- Don't share personal items like toothbrushes, razors,
or nail clippers.
- Get vaccinated against hepatitis A if your liver is damaged
and hepatitis B if you are in a group at increased risk
of getting hepatitis B.
- Limit sexual partners and use latex condoms every time
you have sex.
- Cover your cuts and open sores.
Hepatitis D
- How you get it: Contact with a person
infected with the hepatitis D virus (HDV). You also must
have current HBV infection to get HDV infection. HDV infection
can occur by sharing needles to inject drugs, by having
sex with an infected person, and from infected mother to
child during childbirth.
- What it does to your body: Causes swelling
of the liver and can lead to liver disease and cirrhosis.
- Treatment: It might get better on its
own. Antiviral drugs might be helpful in treating chronic
HDV infection.
- Prevention:
- Get hepatitis B vaccine.
- Do not shoot drugs. If you shoot drugs, stop and get
into a treatment program. If you can't stop, never share
drugs, needles, syringes, water, or "works," and get vaccinated
against hepatitis A and B.
- Don't share personal items like toothbrushes, razors,
and nail clippers with someone who has the virus.
- Use latex condoms every time you have sex.
Hepatitis E
- How you get it: A person can get infected
with hepatitis E virus (HEV) by eating food or drinking
water contaminated with feces from an infected person.
Hepatitis E is usually a disease that occurs in persons
who travel to areas that have high rates of HEV infection.
This type of hepatitis is not common in the United States.
- What it does to your body: It causes
swelling of the liver, but no long-term damage. Pregnant
women and their babies are at increased risk of dying if
infected with HEV.
- Treatment: It usually goes away on its
own.
- Prevention: Be careful about drinking
the tap water and eating uncooked foods when traveling
internationally.
What’s the difference between acute
viral hepatitis and chronic viral hepatitis?
Acute viral hepatitis is a short-term, viral infection.
Chronic viral hepatitis is a longer-lasting, and generally
life-long, viral infection lasting at least six months. To
find out if you have acute or chronic viral hepatitis, your
doctor will do a medical evaluation that includes blood tests.
How
is viral hepatitis diagnosed?
Through blood tests and a medical evaluation. There are
different blood tests, depending on the type of viral hepatitis
that the doctor thinks you have.
Is it safe to visit someone with hepatitis?
It is safe to visit someone with viral hepatitis. You cannot
get hepatitis through casual contact. It is ok to shake hands
with, hug, or kiss someone who is infected with any of the
viral hepatitis types.
How does a pregnant woman pass hepatitis
B virus to her baby?
During the birth, blood from the mother gets inside the
baby’s body. A very small number of babies get infected
while the infected mother is pregnant. There is no treatment
to prevent this from happening.
Can I breastfeed my baby if I have hepatitis
B?
Yes, you can. Make sure your baby gets a shot called H-BIG
and a shot of hepatitis B vaccine within 12 hours of birth.
Take good care of your nipple areas to prevent cracking and
bleeding. If your nipples are cracking or bleeding, avoid
nursing your baby on that breast until the sores heal. Until
they heal, you can pump your milk to keep up your milk supply.
But you should discard this pumped milk.
If I have hepatitis B, what does my baby
need so that she doesn't get the virus?
Make sure your baby gets all three hepatitis B shots plus
H-BIG. If you are a mother with hepatitis B, follow this
schedule for your baby:
- At birth: hepatitis B vaccine and H-BIG
- 1 to 2 months old: hepatitis B vaccine
- 6 months old: hepatitis B vaccine (not before 24 weeks,
but no later than six months)
These shots will fight off the virus, and they are safe
for your baby. If your baby gets those shots, there is a
much lower chance your baby will get hepatitis B. A few months
after your baby gets all of these shots, the doctor should
do blood tests to see if your baby has the virus or if your
baby is protected from HBV infection. If your baby does not
get these shots, the baby has a very high chance of getting
hepatitis B and developing serious liver disease.
How long do the hepatitis A and B vaccines
protect you?
Only 1 series of the hepatitis A vaccine (2 shots) and hepatitis
B vaccine (3 shots) is needed during a person's lifetime.
Currently, there are no recommendations to give booster doses
of either hepatitis A or hepatitis B vaccine.
To read more of this article from WomensHealth.gov, please
click here: http://www.4woman.gov/faq/hepatitis.htm
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