This document provides a summary of key information about 5 types of viral hepatitis: A, B, C, D, and E. It outlines the virus type, route of transmission, sources of infection, incubation period, antigens and antibodies, complications, prevention methods, and treatment for each type. The main points are that hepatitis A and E are transmitted via the fecal-oral route, hepatitis B is transmitted via blood and body fluids, hepatitis C is most commonly transmitted via blood exposures, and hepatitis D requires existing hepatitis B infection to replicate. Prevention strategies include vaccination, immune globulin, avoiding risky behaviors, and good hygiene.
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Hepatitis Table
This document provides a summary of key information about 5 types of viral hepatitis: A, B, C, D, and E. It outlines the virus type, route of transmission, sources of infection, incubation period, antigens and antibodies, complications, prevention methods, and treatment for each type. The main points are that hepatitis A and E are transmitted via the fecal-oral route, hepatitis B is transmitted via blood and body fluids, hepatitis C is most commonly transmitted via blood exposures, and hepatitis D requires existing hepatitis B infection to replicate. Prevention strategies include vaccination, immune globulin, avoiding risky behaviors, and good hygiene.
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Hepatitis A Hepatitis B Hepatitis C Hepatitis D Hepatitis E
(HVA) (HBV) (HCV) (HDV) (HEV)
VIRUS TYPE RNA DNA RNA Single-strand RNA RNA-requires HBV to replicate ROUTE OF Fecal-oral Blood, body Blood, body Fecal-oral TRANSMISSION fluids fluids SOURCES crowded contaminated Blood, blood Similar to Contaminated conditions, poor blood products, products, HBV- water, common hygiene/sanitati needles, needles, commonly w/ in Asia, Middle on, syringes, sexual syringes, sexual IV drug use, East, Africa, contaminated contact w/ activity hemodialysis, Mexico food, food infected w/infected blood handlers, sexual partner, partner transfusions contact asymptomatic IV drug use Sexual carrier, tattoos, most common transmission body piercing, not as bites common
INCUBATION 15 – 50 days 45 - 180 days 14-180 days 2 - 26 weeks 15-64 days
(ave=56) ANITGEN (AG) HBsAG-current infection, chronic carrier HBeAG-acute active infection ANTIBODY Anti-HAV IgM- Anti-HBs- Anti-HCV-acute Anti-HDV-past None (anti) acute infection previous or chronic or current Anti-HAV IgG- infection or infection infection previous immunization infection COMPLICATION Fulminant Chronic Chronic Fulminant No chronic S Hepatic Failure infection, infection, Hepatitis infection fulminant cirrhosis, liver hepatic failure cancer PREVENTION 2 dose vaccine, Vaccine:s series No vaccine d/t Similar to THE QUICK AND DIRTY ON HEPATITIS immune of 3, constant HBV, avoid globulin, good 1 month and six mutation. risky behavior handwashing month Avoid risky Immune behaviors globulin TREATMENT Supportive Antivirals- Antivirals- Interferon Supportive care care, immune lamivudine, ribavirin, under globulin interferon interferon, research transplant CAUTION DO NOT donate DO NOT donate Do not drink blood, organs blood water, use ice, eat shellfish, produce
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