Hepatitis Information | Hepatitis C Causes | HCV Treatments | All About Hepatitis C | Testing For Hep C | Hepatitis B
Hepatitis Test Information | Crohns Disease Hepatitis C | Lyme Disease Hepatitis | Hepatitis B Thyroid Disease |
Genetic Skin Disease Hep C | Gum Disease Hepatitis | Heart Disease Hepatitis B | List of Infectious Disease |
Clinical Trials Hepatitis | Liver Damage | Symptoms Liver Disease | Site Map Hepatitis | Advanced Liver Disease | Fatty Liver Disease |
Liver Inflamation - Liver Diseases - Alpha Interferon Effects - Interferon Side Effects - Interferon - Hepatitis Lipitor - Liver Disease Psc -
Metastatic Liver Disease - End Stage Liver Disease - Metasticized Liver Disease - Polycystic Liver Disease - Child Liver Disease -
Early Sign Of Liver Disease - Non alcoholoic fatty liver disease - Center for disease control pennsylvania - Information on Liver Disease - Liver Disease Treatment - Liver Disease Diet - Treatments For Chronic Active Hepatitis C - Sign and symptom of thyroid disease -

Hepatitis C Directory Help Site


 

Welcome to the Hepatitis C Directory: this site is being developed and designed to help people learn about hepatitis C its effects on the body, the different types of exposure, ways to protect yourself from this deadly virus and different resources available to help you or a loved one cope living we Hep C.

Information: This site will provide a bulletin board for sharing information there will be no charge for joining or posting messages relevant to our topics. This site is totaly free for you to use. However at times there maybe links that are posted that will lead you away from Hepatitis C Directory that may charge fees! WE DO NOT HAVE ANY AFFILATION WITH SUCH PAGES.

Development Usage: Hepatitis C Directory is a free to use site what I am looking to put forward is a place where all types of help for Hep C can be exchanged, learned, posted for others to view and to stop the spread of this terrible virus.

Jobs: Hepatitis C Directory is free site so we can not pay for any help but if you would like to be part of the development I welcome you emails. Just let me know what you feel you can contribute or what your expertise or passion is for wanting to be invovled please write me at: Help Hepatitis C Directory

There are at least six viruses known to cause liver disease: hepatitis A, B, C, D, E, and G, which vary in their severity and characteristics. Hepatitis C can lead to serious, permanent liver damage, and in many cases, death.

The Hepatitis C (HCV) virus was identified in 1989. Unlike the other types of viral hepatitis, hepatitis C is very difficult for the immune system to overcome.

As a result, most Hepatitis C infections (80-90%) become chronic and lead to liver disease, including cirrhosis (scarring of the liver tissues) and liver failure. Hepatitis C infection is typically mild in its early stages, and it is rarely recognized until it has caused significant damage to the liver. The cycle of disease from infection to significant liver damage can take 20 years or more.

Risk factors for hepatitis C.

Blood transfusions account for nearly 10% of all cases of Hepatitis C. Prior to 1990, there were no tests for hepatitis C in donated blood, and the risk of infection was between 8 and 10%. Since 1993, risk has been negligible.

Almost any direct or indirect exposure to infected blood can transmit the virus. This includes I.V. drug use and poorly sterilized medical instruments, blood spills, unbandaged cuts or injuries, and tattooing or body piercing, as well as less obvious sources of blood, such as shared razors or toothbrushes, or body secretions (such as mucous) that may contain small amounts of blood. In about 10% of all cases, no risk factors have been identified.

Heterosexual and homosexual activity, particularly with multiple partners and in the absence of protective measures, can transmit the virus. Close contact between household members has also been implicated.

The symptoms of Hepatitis C are often very mild, at least in the early stages of infection and can be virtually undetectable. The most common symptom, commencing sometimes years after initial infection, is fatigue. Other symptoms include mild fever, muscle and joint aches, nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite, vague abdominal pain, and sometimes diarrhea. Many cases go undiagnosed because the symptoms are suggestive of a flu-like illness which just comes and goes.

When the disease progresses and damages the liver badly enough, the symptoms become commensurate with cirrhosis and liver failure, including jaundice, abdominal swelling (due to fluid retention called ascites),and finally coma.

There is no vaccine for Hepatitis C at present, and because of the virus's frequent mutation, it may be a long time before one becomes available. However, because of Hepatitis C's slowly progressive infection, infected patients have long life expectancies, and with proper treatment, many of them can recover completely.


Questions Comments: info@hepatitiscdirectrory.com