Hepatitis Virus | Description | Causes/Route of Transmission | Treatment | Prevention |
---|---|---|---|---|
HAV | Contagious, acute inflammation of the liver; most people recover completely. | Ingestion of trace fecal matter from unwashed hands or eating food prepared in unsanitary conditions. | No medications; plenty of fluids and bed rest with a nutritious diet; avoid alcohol or medications that can further damage the liver during recovery. | Vaccine available. |
HBV | Contagious, acute liver infection that may become chronic. |
Exposure to body fluids infected with the virus; transmitted via:
|
No medications; plenty of fluids and bed rest with a nutritious diet; avoid alcohol or medications that can further damage the liver during recovery. Chronic infection is treated with antivirals only if severe complications arise to prevent liver damage. |
Vaccine available. |
HCV | Contagious liver infection; 75-85 percent of those infected develop chronic infection and 60-70 percent will develop chronic liver disease. |
Exposure to body fluids infected with the virus; transmitted via:
|
Doctors treat hepatitis C with antiviral medicines that attack the virus and can cure the disease in most cases. | No vaccine available. Avoid risky behavior. |
HDV |
Viral infection that can damage the liver; can multiply only if HBV is present. There are two types of infection:
|
Exposure to body fluids infected with the virus; transmitted via:
|
HDV infection may resolve on its own in persons co-infected with HBV. Overall, the relative risk of developing cirrhosis in patients coinfected with HBV and HDV is twice that of patients infected with HBV alone. | For those uninfected, get HBV vaccine, since HDV requires HBV to multiply. For those with HBV, there is no HDV vaccine. Avoid risky behavior. |
HEV | Acute inflammatory liver disease that does not become chronic. | Drinking water contaminated with fecal matter from an infected person. Transmission through blood is rare. | No medications; plenty of fluids and bed rest with a nutritious diet; avoid alcohol or medications that can further damage the liver during recovery. | No vaccine available. Avoid contaminated water. |