Hepatitis Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
Hepatitis A
Single stranded RNA virus, almost exclusively spread fecal oral route most often person to person, incubation 2-6 weeks, increasing age increases symptoms as newborns are usually asymptomatic and anicteric, boiling water/iodine/chlorine are effective for destroying virus, risk highest in developing countries, usually self limiting, prognosis generally excellent without lasting sequelae
2 phases of Hep A infection
Prodrome - mild flu like symptoms
Icteric - develop dark urine then pale stools, jaundice
If you order a patient a total Hep A antibody panel (IgM + IgG) and they have only IgG, then…
….patient either previously had disease or was vaccinated
Hep A treatment
- supportive
- sugarcane in developing countries
- locate primary source to prevent further outbreaks
- post exposure prophylaxis with gammaguard within 2 weeks of exposure for non immunized close contacts
Hepatitis B
DNA virus, estimated 1/3 of global population has been infeected, incubation period 1-6 months, transmitted via body fluids (blood/semen/vaginal secretions) including sexual/parenteral/perinatal, anicteric hepatitis has greater tendency to develop chronic hep
2 phases of hep B infection
- Acute phase - majority asymptomatic
- Viral prodrome with icteric hepatitis (arthralgias, skin rash, low grade fever, jaundice for 1-3 months)
Hepatitis Ig labs
- core IgM indicates acute infection
- core IgG indicates past infection (not from vaccination)
- surface antigen indicates acute or chronic infection
- surface antibody indicates had virus (if core antibody positive) or vaccine (if only positive value then vaccinated)
- E antigen indicates active viral replication and highly contagious
- E antibody indicates a carrier
Chronic hep B treatment
Referral to GI
Any patient with chronic hep B requires….
….screening regimen for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), which is an ultrasound every 6-12 months
Hep B 3 treatments
- pegylated interferon alpha
- entecavir
- tenofovir disoproxil fumarate
Hepatits C
Single stranded RNA virus, most frequent cause for liver transplant in US, most frequently occurring nonA nonB hepatitis worldwide, 80% will remain viremic and 20% of that will develop cirrhosis, transmitted primarily via iv drug use, transfusion prior to 1990, needle stick, increased risk of transmission if co infection with HIV, incidence rising due to opioid epidemic, good prognosis if treated acutely
Who should be screened for hep C (4)
- evidence of liver diz
- HIV infected individuals
- incarcerated
- needle stick injury
Acute vs chronic hep C diagnosis
- Acute is clinical suspicion and sometimes HCV PCR
- Chronic most patients are asymptomatic
Most common genotype of hep C
1
Chronic hep C screening
- HCV antibody test
- if positive, check assays for HCV RNA using PCR
- if not present then cleared, if present then send to GI