Hep B Flashcards

1
Q

what is Hep B virus?

A

double stranded DNA hepadnavirus

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2
Q

how is hep B spread?

A

exposure to infected blood, body fluids or vertical transmission

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3
Q

incubation period of Hep B?

A

6-20 weeks

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4
Q

features of Hep B?

A

fever, jaundice and elevated liver trasnaminase

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5
Q

complications of Hep B?

A

chronic hepatitis (ground glass hepatocytes)
hepatocellular carcinoma,
liver failure
glomerulonephritis
polyarteritis nodosa
cryoglobulinaemia (abnormal proteins in blood clump together in cold)

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6
Q

what age are vaccines given for Hep B?

A

2,3 and 4 months

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7
Q

what do you give in hep b vaccination?

A

HBsAG prepared from yeast cells

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8
Q

response to vaccination Hep B?

A

more than 100- no further testing booster at 5 years
10-100- suboptimal response one additional vaccine dose
less than 10- not responding check for current or past infection. may require HBIG for protection

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9
Q

management of Hep B?

A

pegylated interferon alpha first line to reduce viral replication
other medication: tenofovir, entecavir and telbivudine

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10
Q

what would you see on Heb B serology?

A

HBsAg less than 6 months acute, more then chronic

AntiHBc- previous or current infection
igM anti-HB appears in acute infection IgG antiHBc persists

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11
Q

HbeAg implies?

A

marker of infectivity

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