Hepatitis Flashcards
what is the relevance of Hepatitis globally and in the UK?
- more people live with hepatitis than HIV worldwide
- develop end stage liver disease
what are the general principles of hepatitis infection?
- hepatitis viruses specifically target the liver and they replicate specifically in hepatocytes
- 5 known viruses A-E
- Hep A is most common but there is a vaccine for it so there are little long-term consequeneces
- Hep B + C are the blood borne viruses - mild symptoms and you dont know you have it so you can spread it
what LFT results indicate hepatitis infection?
viral hepatitis results in intrahepatic jaundice (issue arises within the liver)
ALT or AST are elevated it tells us there is hepatocyte damage is intrahepatic
how is hepatitis B transmitted?
mostly vertical but also through sexual contact
what are the main symptoms of hepatitis B?
- jaundice
- fatigue
- abdominal pain
- nausea
how can you test for hepatitis B?
serology to detect following antibodies (HbsAg + HBsAb or HBeAg + HBeAb)
HBV DNA PCR test
what is classed as chronic hepatitis infection?
persistence of HBsAg after 6 months
how is hepatitis B prevented?
Hep B vaccine is given to babies at 8, 12 and 16 weeks old
how is hepatitis C transmitted?
most commonly in IV drug users
low levels of risk through sexual contact + mother to child
how is hepatitis C detected?
serology - presence of anti-hep C antibodies
PCR testing
how is hepatitis C treated?
antiviral drugs for 8-12 weeks
(risk of re-infection since no vaccine)