Viral Hepatitis: C Flashcards

1
Q

Define Viral Hepatitis?

A

Hepatitis caused by infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV), often following a chronic course (in 80% of cases)

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2
Q

What is the aetiology of HCV?

A

HCV is a small, enveloped, single-stranded RNA virus
RNA viruses have poor fidelity of replication and mutation rates are high
So there are lots of HCV genotypes (which can co-exist in a single patient)

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3
Q

What is the transmission of HCV?

A

Parenteral:
Sexual Transmission
Vertical Transmission

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4
Q

What patients are at risk of HCV?

A
Recipients of blood and blood products 
IV drug users 
Non-sterile acupuncture 
Tattooing 
Haemodialysis 
Health care workers
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5
Q

What is the pathology of HCV?

A

The virus is not thought to be directly hepatotoxic

It is the humoural and cell-mediated responses to the viral infection that leads to hepatic inflammation and necrosis

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6
Q

What might you see on a Liver Biopsy for HCV?

A

Chronic Hepatitis
Lymphoid follicles in portal tracts
Fatty change
Cirrhosis may be present

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7
Q

What is the epidemiology of HCV?

A

COMMON

Different genotypes of HCV have different geographical prevalence

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8
Q

What are the presenting symptoms of HCV?

A

90% of acute infections are ASYMPTOMATIC
10% become jaundiced with mild flu-like illness
May be diagnosed after incidental abnormal LFT

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9
Q

What are the signs of HCV on physical examination?

A

May be NO SIGNS

There may be signs of chronic liver disease (if long-standing HCV infection)

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10
Q

What are the extra-hepatic manifestations of HCV?

A
Skin rash
Renal dysfunction (due to glomerulonephritis)
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11
Q

What bloods do you do for HCV?

A

HCV Serology
Reverse-transcriptase PCR
LFT

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12
Q

What is the HCV Serology of HCV?

A

Anti-HCV antibodies - IgM (acute) or IgG (past exposure or chronic)

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13
Q

Why do we do Reverse-transcriptase PCR for HCV?

A

Allows detection and genotyping of HCV

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14
Q

What do we look for on LFTs for Acute infection of HCV?

A

High ALT, AST and bilirubin

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15
Q

What do we look for on LFTs for Chronic Infection of HCV?

A

2-8x elevation of AST + ALT (often fluctuates over time)

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16
Q

Why do we do a Liver Biopsy for HCV?

A

Assess the degree of inflammation and liver damage
Transaminase (AST and ALT) levels bear little correlation to histological chnages
Useful for diagnosing cirrhosis

17
Q

What do we do to prevent HCV?

A

Screen blood, blood products and organ donors
Needle exchange schemes for IV drug users
Instrument sterilisation
NO VACCINE AVAILABLE

18
Q

What is the Acute Medical management plan for HCV?

A

Mainly supportive (antipyretics, antiemetics, cholestyramine)

19
Q

What is the medical management plan for Chronic HCV?

A
Pegylated interferon-a
Ribavirin (guanosine nucletide analogue)
Duration:
HCV Genotype 1 or 4: 24-48 weeks
HCV Genotype 2 or 3: 12-24 weeks
20
Q

When do we do Regular US of the liver for HCV?

A

May be needed if the patient has cirrhosis

21
Q

What are the possible complications of HCV?

A

Fulminant hepatic failure
Chronic carriage of HCV
Hepatocellular carcinoma

22
Q

What are the less possible complications of HCV?

A

Porphyria cutanea tarda
Cryoglobulinaemia
Glomerulonephritis

23
Q

What is the prognosis for patients with HCV?

A

80% of exposed will progress to chronic carriage

Of these, 20-30% will develop cirrhosis over 10-20 years