Zusammenfassung der Ressource
viral hepatitis
Anmerkungen:
- differ by:
-mode of transmission
-liver damage they cause
-how they affect health
Most common cause of liver disease worldwide.
Mild attacks are asymptomatic.
May be acute or chronic.
Can occur at any age.
- acute viral hepatitis:
- <6mths
-observed with all types
chronic viral hepatitis:
-viremia and hepatic inflammation >6mths following infection
-hep B,C and D
-may lead to cirrhosis and end stage liver disease
- hepatitis A
- only host virus - humans
- no reported cases of
chronic hepatitis
- major cause of acute hepatitis
- most attacks are mild
- mode of transmission:
faecal-oral route
- risk factors
- international travels
to endemic areas
- sexual
contact
- shell fish with the virus
- IV drug users +
non-sterile needles
- workers involved with
primate animals
- food service handlers
- patients with
clotting factors
disorders
- healthcare workers
- household contact with
infected person
- diagnosis
- antibodies to hepatitis A
virus in the serum
- IgM - usually present about
3 weeks post exposure;
undetected within 6mths
- IgG - present at the same time as IgM;
indicates protection and lifelong
immunity against infection
- treatment
- no drug treatment;
only supportive
Anmerkungen:
- significant nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea and encephalopathy - hospitalisation required
- prevention
- good personal hygiene
& proper sanitary waste
disposal
- immunoglobulin
Anmerkungen:
- IM preparation
Provides passive immunity but not life long
effective for pre and post exposure prophylaxis against hepatitis A
- hepatitis A vaccine
Anmerkungen:
- -may be given alone or combined with typhoid vaccine
-provides effective active immunity
-adverse effects:
*injection site reactions
*headache
*fatigue
- hepatitis B
- blood borne infection
- highest conc of virus -
blood & serous fluids
- incubation
period
3-6mths
- may be acute or chronic
- mode of transmission
- blood or body fluids through
peri-natal, sexual or IV drug use
- blood
transfusions
from infected
donors
- sexual intercourse
- risk factors
- about 1/3 reported cases
will have no identifiable
risk factors
- men having sex
with other men
- many heterosexual
partners
- use of non-sterile needles
- recipients of blood products
- household contact with
hepatitis B with open wounds
- healthcare providers
with contact with
contaminated needles
- dialysis patients
- diagnosis
- surface antigen (HBsAg)
Anmerkungen:
- -first to be detected in blood
-presence of recent infection
-chronic infection if present for >6mths
- envelope antigen (HBeAg)
Anmerkungen:
- -virus replication
-active acute infection if HBV DNA is also present
- antibodies to the core
antigen (HBcAg)
Anmerkungen:
- -IgM indicates acute infection
-IgG indicates chronic infection
- virological marker: HBV DNA
Anmerkungen:
- Hepatitis B virus DNA
-present in blood regardless of phase of infection
-viral infectivity and quantify viral replication
- prevention
- avoid contaminated blood products or
refrain from high risk behaviour
- high risk patients
should be vaccinated
Anmerkungen:
- IM for optimal effects
3 doses given
injection should not be give in the gluteal region
- immunoglobulin
Anmerkungen:
- give IM for passive immunity for post exposure prophylaxis
- treatment
- immune
modulators eg
interferons
Anmerkungen:
- help immune system to mount a defense against the virus
- nucleoside/nucleotide
analogues
Anmerkungen:
- suppress or destroy the hep B virus
- adefovir, entecavir, lamivudine,
telbivudine, tenofovir
- hepatitis C
- blood borne with
greater infectivity
than HIV
- mode of transmission:
blood and body fluids
- often
asymptomatic
- about 85%
develop chronic
disease
- leading indication for
liver transplant worldwide
- risk factors
- blood product recipients
- healthcare workers in contact
with contaminated needles
- having multiple
sexual partners
- perinatal
transmission
- unprofessional
body piercing
- diagnosis
- test for anti-hepatitis
C virus in serum
- prevenion
- avoid contaminated blood
products or refrain from high risk
behaviour
- individuals at high risk should be
testes since its asymptomatic
- treatment
- peginteferon plus ribavirin
Anmerkungen:
- peginteferon can be used as monotherapy if ribavirin is intolerated of CI
- ribavirin
Anmerkungen:
- -excreted in semen
-condom use if partners of infected men are pregnant
-can cause gout
-avoid if creatinine clearance is <50ml/min
- hepatitis D
- risk factors for
transmission same
as for hep B
- can only cause infection in
patients infected with
hepatitis B
- diagnosis
- presence of hepatitis D
virus RNA in the serum -
most accurate diagnosis
- hep B vaccine can prevent hep D
- hepatitis E
- faecal oral route
- no chronic cases of
hep E reported
- risk factors
- international travellers
to endemic area
- ingesting food thats
contaminated with bodily waste
- prevention
- good personal hygiene and
proper sanitary waste disposal
- no vaccine available
- fulminant hepatitis
- liver transplant
- acute - no drug
treatment only
supportive
- symptoms & signs
- mostly asymptomatic
- flu-like symptoms, fever, fatigue, anorexia,
N&V, diarrhoea, dark urine, pale stools,
pruritus, abdominal pain
- jaundice
- hepatomegaly, splenomegaly,
adenopathy
- in fulminant hepatitis with hepatic encephalopathy
patients may have asterixis and coma
- treatment goals
- prevent spread of infection
- prevent and treat symptoms
- suppress viral replication
- normalise LFTs
- improve histology on liver biopsy
- decrease
morbidity and
mortality