Hepatitis is inflammation of the liver.
Several different viruses cause viral hepatitis.
They are named the hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E viruses.
All of these viruses cause acute, or short-term, viral hepatitis.
The hepatitis B, C, and D viruses can also cause chronic hepatitis, in which the infection is prolonged, sometimes lifelong.
Other viruses may also cause hepatitis, but they have yet to be discovered and they are obviously rare causes of the disease.
Symptoms of viral hepatitis :
Hepatitis A Disease Spread
People at Risk
Prevention
Treatment
Hepatitis B Disease Spread
People at Risk
Prevention
Treatment
Hepatitis C Disease Spread
People at Risk
Prevention
Treatment
Hepatitis D Disease Spread
People at Risk
Prevention
Treatment
Hepatitis E Disease Spread
People at Risk
Prevention
Treatment
Other Causes of Viral Hepatitis Some cases of viral hepatitis cannot be attributed to the hepatitis A, B, C, D, or E viruses.
This is called non A...E hepatitis or hepatitis X.
Scientists have identified several candidate viruses, but none have been proven to cause hepatitis.
The search for the virus responsible for hepatitis X continues.
jaundice (yellowing of the skin and eyes)
fatigue
abdominal pain
loss of appetite
nausea
diarrhea
vomiting.
However, some people do not have symptoms until the disease is advanced.
Primarily through food or water contaminated by feces from an infected person. Rarely, it spreads through contact with infected blood.
International travelers; people living in areas where hepatitis A outbreaks are common; people who live with or have sex with an infected person; and, during outbreaks, day care children and employees, sexually active gay men, and injection drug users.
The hepatitis A vaccine; also, avoiding tap water when traveling internationally and practicing good hygiene and sanitation.
Hepatitis A usually resolves on its own over several weeks.
Through contact with infected blood, through sex with an infected person, and from mother to child during childbirth.
Injection drug users, people who have sex with an infected person, men who have sex with men, children of immigrants from disease-endemic areas, people who live with an infected person, infants born to infected mothers, health care workers, and hemodialysis patients.
The hepatitis B vaccine.
Drug treatment with alpha interferon or lamivudine.
Primarily through contact with infected blood; less commonly, through sexual contact and childbirth.
Injection drug users, hemodialysis patients, health care workers, people who have sex with an infected person, people who have multiple sex partners, infants born to infected women, and people who received a transfusion of blood or blood products before July 1992 or clotting factors made before 1987.
There is no vaccine for hepatitis C--the only way to prevent the disease is to reduce the risk of exposure to the virus. This means avoiding behaviors like sharing drug needles or sharing personal items like toothbrushes, razors, and nail clippers with an infected person.
Drug treatment with alpha interferon or combination treatment with interferon and the drug ribavirin.
Through contact with infected blood. This disease occurs only in people who are already infected with hepatitis B.
Anyone infected with hepatitis B. Injection drug users who have hepatitis B have the highest risk. People who have hepatitis B are also at risk if they have sex with a person infected with hepatitis D or if they live with an infected person.
Immunization against hepatitis B for those not already infected; also, avoiding exposure to infected blood, contaminated needles, and an infected person's personal items (toothbrush, razor, nail clippers).
Drug treatment with alpha interferon.
Through food or water contaminated by feces from an infected person. This disease is uncommon in the United States.
International travelers; people living in areas where hepatitis E outbreaks are common; and people who live or have sex with an infected person.
There is no vaccine for hepatitis E--the only way to prevent the disease is to reduce the risk of exposure to the virus. This means avoiding tap water when traveling internationally and practicing good hygiene and sanitation.
Hepatitis E usually resolves on its own over several weeks to months.
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