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Friday 7 November 2014

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A

 

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A

 

is an acute infectious disease of the liver caused by the hepatitis A virus (HAV). Many cases have little or no symptoms especially in the young. The time between infection and symptoms, in those who develop them, is between two and six weeks. When there are symptoms they typically last eight weeks and may include: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, yellow skin, fever, and abdominal pain. Around 10–15% of people experience a recurrence of symptoms during the six months after the initial infection. Acute liver failure may rarely occur with this being more common in the elderly 

 Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A is a highly contagious liver infection caused by the hepatitis A virus. The virus is one of several types of hepatitis viruses that cause inflammation and affect your liver's ability to function.
You're most likely to contract hepatitis A from contaminated food or water or from close contact with someone who's infected. Mild cases of hepatitis A don't require treatment, and most people who are infected recover completely with no permanent liver damage.
Practicing good hygiene, including washing hands frequently, is one of the best ways to protect against hepatitis A. Vaccines are available for people most at risk.


Hepatitis A


It is usually spread by eating or drinking food or water contaminated with infected feces. Shellfish which have not been sufficiently cooked is a relatively common source. It may also be spread through close contact with an infectious person. While children often do not have symptoms when infected they are still able to infect others. After a single infection a person is immune for the rest of their life. Diagnosis requires blood testing as the symptoms are similar to those of a number of other diseases.
The hepatitis A vaccine is effective for prevention. Some countries recommend it routinely for children and those at higher risk who have not previously been vaccinated. It appears to be effective for life. Other preventative measures include hand washing and properly cooking food. There is no specific treatment, with rest and medications for nausea or diarrhea recommended on an as needed basis. Infections usually resolve completely and without ongoing liver disease. Treatment of acute liver failure, if it occurs, is with liver transplantion.
Globally around 1.5 million symptomatic cases occur each year with likely tens of millions of infections in all. It is more common in regions of the world with poor sanitation and not enough safe water. In the developing world about 90% of children have been infected by age 10 and thus are immune by adulthood. It often occurs in outbreaks in moderately developed countries where children are not exposed when young and there is not widespread vaccination. In 2010, acute hepatitis A resulted in 102,000 deaths. World Hepatitis Day occurs each year on July 28 to bring awareness to viral hepatitis


Countries

Hepatitis A

 

There were 30,000 cases of hepatitis A reported to the CDC in the US in 1997 but the number has since dropped to less than 2,000 cases reported per year.
The most widespread hepatitis A outbreak in the 2003 United States hepatitis outbreak afflicted at least 640 people (killing four) in north-eastern Ohio and south-western Pennsylvania in late 2003. The outbreak was blamed on tainted green onions at a restaurant in Monaca, Pennsylvania. In 1988, more than 300,000 people in Shanghai, China were infected with HAV after eating clams (Anadara subcrenata) from a contaminated river. In June 2013, frozen berries sold by US retailer Costco and purchased by around 240,000 people were the subject of a recall, after at least 158 people were infected with HAV, 69 of whom were hospitalized.

 symptomatic HAV infections are believed to occur in around 1,4 million people a year. There is however likely tens of millions of infections in all. In 2010, acute hepatitis A resulted in 102,000 deaths which is slightly up from 99,000 in 1990. Developed countries have low circulating levels of hepatitis A virus while developing countries have high circulating levels of hepatitis A virus. Most adolescents and adults in developing countries have already had the disease and are thus immune. Adults in mid level countries may be at risk of disease with the potential of being exposed


Hepatitis A

Transmission

 In developing countries, and in regions with poor hygiene standards, the rates of infection with this virus are high and the illness is usually contracted in early childhood. As incomes rise and access to clean water increases, the incidence of HAV decreases. In developed countries on the other hand, the infection is contracted primarily by susceptible young adults, most of whom are infected with the virus during trips to countries with a high incidence of the disease or through contact with infectious persons.

 The virus spreads by the fecal–oral route and infections often occur in conditions of poor sanitation and overcrowding. Hepatitis A can be transmitted by the parenteral route but very rarely by blood and blood products. Food-borne outbreaks are not uncommon, and ingestion of shellfish cultivated in polluted water is associated with a high risk of infection. Approximately 40% of all acute viral hepatitis is caused by HAV. Infected individuals are infectious prior to onset of symptoms, roughly 10 days following infection. The virus is resistant to detergent, acid (pH 1), solvents (e.g., ether, chloroform), drying, and temperatures up to 60 °C. It can survive for months in fresh and salt water. Common-source (e.g., water, restaurant) outbreaks are typical. Infection is common in children in developing countries, reaching 100% incidence, but following infection there is lifelong immunity. HAV can be inactivated by: chlorine treatment (drinking water), formalin (0.35%, 37 °C, 72 hours), peracetic acid (2%, 4 hours), beta-propiolactone (0.25%, 1-hour), and UV radiation (2 μW/cm2/min).

study of viruses

Hepatitis A

HAV enters the bloodstream through the epithelium of the oropharynx or intestine. The blood carries the virus to its target, the liver, where it multiplies within hepatocytes and Kupffer cells (liver macrophages). Virions are secreted into the bile and released in stool. HAV is excreted in large quantities approximately 11 days prior to appearance of symptoms or anti-HAV IgM antibodies in the blood. The incubation period is 15–50 days and mortality is less than 0.5%. Within the liver hepatocytes the RNA genome is released from the protein coat and is translated by the cell's own ribosomes. Unlike other picornaviruses this virus requires an intact eukaryote initiating factor 4G (eIF4G) for the initiation of translation. The requirement for this factor results in an inability to shut down host protein synthesis unlike other picornaviruses. The virus must then inefficiently compete for the cellular translational machinery which may explain its poor growth in cell culture. Presumably for this reason the virus has strategically adopted a naturally highly deoptimized codon usage with respect to that of its cellular host. Precisely how this strategy works is not quite clear yet.
There is no apparent virus-mediated cytotoxicity presumably because of the virus' own requirement for an intact eIF4G and liver pathology is likely immune-mediated.


 Signs and symptoms

 

Hepatitis A

 Hepatitis A

Structure

The hepatitis A virus is a picornavirus; it is non-enveloped and contains a single-stranded RNA packaged in a protein shell. There is only one serotype of the virus, but multiple genotypes exist. Codon use within the genome is biased and unusually distinct from its host. It also has a poor internal ribosome entry site. In the region that codes for the HAV capsid, there are highly conserved clusters of rare codons that restrict antigenic variability


Hepatitis AHepatitis A       

Genotypes

Hepatitis A



Hepatitis A



Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A


Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A


One serotype and seven different genetic groups (four humans and three simian) have been described. The human genotypes are numbered I-III. Six subtypes have been described (IA, IB, IIA, IIB, IIIA, IIIB). The simian genotypes have been numbered IV-VI. A single isolate of genotype VII isolated from a human has also been described. Genotype III has been isolated from both humans and owl monkeys. Most human isolates are of genotype I. Of the type I isolates subtype IA accounts for the majority.
The mutation rate in the genome has been estimated to be 1.73–9.76 x 10−4 nucleotide substitution per site per year.The human strains appear to have diverged from the simian ~3600 years ago. The mean age of genotypes III and IIIA strains has been estimated to be 592 and 202 years respectively.



Hepatitis A

Treatment

There is no specific treatment for hepatitis A. Sufferers are advised to rest, avoid fatty foods and alcohol (these may be poorly tolerated for some additional months during the recovery phase and cause minor relapses), eat a well-balanced diet, and stay hydrated.

In the United States in 1991 there was a low mortality rate for hepatitis A of 4 deaths per 1000 cases for the general population but a higher rate of 17.5 per 1000 in those aged 50 and over. The risk of death from acute liver failure following HAV infection increases with age and when the person has underlying chronic liver disease.
Young children that are infected with hepatitis A typically have a milder form of the disease, usually lasting from 1–3 weeks, whereas adults tend to experience a much more severe form of the disease.


Diagnosis





 HAV is excreted in the feces towards the end of the incubation period, specific diagnosis is made by the detection of HAV-specific IgM antibodies in the blood. IgM antibody is only present in the blood following an acute hepatitis A infection. It is detectable from one to two weeks after the initial infection and persists for up to 14 weeks. The presence of IgG antibody in the blood means that the acute stage of the illness is past and the person is immune to further infection. IgG antibody to HAV is also found in the blood following vaccination and tests for immunity to the virus are based on the detection of this antibody.
During the acute stage of the infection, the liver enzyme alanine transferase (ALT) is present in the blood at levels much higher than is normal. The enzyme comes from the liver cells that have been damaged by the virus.
Hepatitis A virus is present in the blood (viremia) and feces of infected people up to two weeks before clinical illness develops

 Hepatitis A Outbreak..

Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A






Vaccination

                                                                                                   

 Hepatitis A

Hepatitis A can be prevented by vaccination, good hygiene and sanitation.
There are two types of vaccines: one containing inactivated hepatitis A virus, and another containing a live but attenuated virus. Both provide active immunity against a future infection. The vaccine protects against HAV in more than 95% of cases for longer than 25 years. In the US the vaccine was first phased in 1996 for children in high-risk areas, and in 1999 it was spread to areas with elevating levels of infection.
The vaccine is given by injection. An initial dose provides protection starting two to four weeks after vaccination; the second booster dose, given six to twelve months later, provides protection for over twenty years.


The vaccine was introduced in 1992 and was initially recommended for persons at high risk. Since then Bahrain and Israel have embarked on eradication programmes. Australia, China, Belarus, Italy, Spain and the United States have started similar programmes. The incidence of hepatitis A where widespread vaccination has been practised has decreased dramatically. In China and the United States the incidence of hepatitis A has decreased by 90% since 1990.
In the United States vaccination of children is recommended at 1 and 2 years of age. It is also recommended in those who have not been previously immunized and who have been exposed or are likely to be exposed due to travel


References

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  12. "Hepatitis A — Prevention". NHS Choices. National Health Service (England). 21 March 2012.
  13. Irving GJ, Holden J, Yang R, Pope D (2012). Irving, Greg J, ed. "Hepatitis A immunisation in persons not previously exposed to hepatitis A". Cochrane Database Syst Rev 7: CD009051. doi:10.1002/14651858.CD009051.pub2. PMID 22786522.
  14. Nothdurft HD (July 2008). "Hepatitis A vaccines". Expert Rev Vaccines 7 (5): 535–45. doi:10.1586/14760584.7.5.535. PMID 18564009.
  15. "Hepatitis A Vaccine: What you need to know". Vaccine Information Statement. CDC. 2006-03-21. Retrieved 2007-03-12.
  16. André FE (2006). "Universal mass vaccination against hepatitis A". Curr Top Microbiol Immunol 304: 95–114. PMID 16989266.
  17. Cui F, Hadler SC, Zheng H, Wang F, Zhenhua W, Yuansheng H, Gong X, Chen Y, Liang X et al. (2009). "Hepatitis A surveillance and vaccine use in China from 1990 through 2007". J Epidemiol 19 (4): 189–195. doi:10.2188/jea.JE20080087. PMID 19561383.
  18. Daniels D, Grytdal S, Wasley A (May 2009). "Surveillance for acute viral hepatitis — United States, 2007". MMWR Surveill Summ 58 (3): 1–27. PMID 19478727.
  19. Hepatitis A PubMed Health
  20. Jacobsen, KH; Wiersma, ST (24 September 2010). "Hepatitis A virus seroprevalence by age and world region, 1990 and 2005". Vaccine 28 (41): 6653–7. doi:10.1016/j.vaccine.2010.08.037. PMID 20723630.
  21. "Hepatitis A Information for Health Professionals — Statistics and Surveillance". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
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  24. Weise, Elizabeth (18 June 2013). "118 sickened in hepatitis A outbreak linked to berries". USA Today.
  25. "Outbreak Cases". Viral Hepatitis. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 28 October 2013.

                 

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