Viral Hepatitis: C Flashcards
Define Viral Hepatitis?
Hepatitis caused by infection with hepatitis C virus (HCV), often following a chronic course (in 80% of cases)
What is the aetiology of HCV?
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)
What is the transmission of HCV?
Parenteral:
Sexual Transmission
Vertical Transmission
What patients are at risk of HCV?
Recipients of blood and blood products IV drug users Non-sterile acupuncture Tattooing Haemodialysis Health care workers
What is the pathology of HCV?
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
What might you see on a Liver Biopsy for HCV?
Chronic Hepatitis
Lymphoid follicles in portal tracts
Fatty change
Cirrhosis may be present
What is the epidemiology of HCV?
COMMON
Different genotypes of HCV have different geographical prevalence
What are the presenting symptoms of HCV?
90% of acute infections are ASYMPTOMATIC
10% become jaundiced with mild flu-like illness
May be diagnosed after incidental abnormal LFT
What are the signs of HCV on physical examination?
May be NO SIGNS
There may be signs of chronic liver disease (if long-standing HCV infection)
What are the extra-hepatic manifestations of HCV?
Skin rash Renal dysfunction (due to glomerulonephritis)
What bloods do you do for HCV?
HCV Serology
Reverse-transcriptase PCR
LFT
What is the HCV Serology of HCV?
Anti-HCV antibodies - IgM (acute) or IgG (past exposure or chronic)
Why do we do Reverse-transcriptase PCR for HCV?
Allows detection and genotyping of HCV
What do we look for on LFTs for Acute infection of HCV?
High ALT, AST and bilirubin
What do we look for on LFTs for Chronic Infection of HCV?
2-8x elevation of AST + ALT (often fluctuates over time)