Home Search SiteMap Contact Us Forum Videos Store Physician Board

Liver Health

Hepatitis C: Are You a Silent Carrier?


Watch Video

Summary & Participants

Hepatitis C is called a silent epidemic because many people are unaware they carry this virus of the liver. But experts say hepatitis C is a public health threat on par with HIV.

Medically Reviewed On: July 05, 2008

Webcast Transcript


ANNOUNCER: Hepatitis C is often referred to as a "silent epidemic". It is largely overlooked by the general public, although many physicians and sufferers of hepatitis C view the virus as a public health threat on par with HIV.

EMMET KEEFFE, MD: The total amount of people in the US that have hepatitis C is about 4 million individuals.

ANNOUNCER: Hepatitis C can present in individuals in two ways. A few days after being infected, a patient may experience an acute, or short-term, illness with flu-like symptoms that usually goes away by itself.

EMMET KEEFFE, MD: Now, some patients will have some subtle symptoms of fatigue or easy tiredness or some mild aching, but those are quite nonspecific symptoms and don't usually lead them to seek out their physician or their health care provider. So many are asymptomatic.

ANNOUNCER: An acute hepatitis C infection may progress into a chronic, or long-term, infection. Patients often have no symptoms and are unaware that they carry the virus.

EMMET KEEFFE, MD: We don't see very much acute hepatitis C. Chronic hepatitis C is far more common. In fact, there was a recent survey conducted by the Centers for Disease Control that showed that 1.8 percent of the adult population have an antibody to hepatitis C. That's huge. That means nearly 2 percent of the U.S. population at some time has been exposed to that virus.

ANNOUNCER: The hepatitis C virus is found in blood and certain body fluids and can be commonly spread in a number of ways.

EMMET KEEFFE, MD: If you had blood transfusions before 1990, you're at risk that you have acquired hepatitis C. If you ever used IV drugs, even on a few occasions as a young college student experiment, you may have picked up hepatitis C, and you also need to be tested.

Now, one of the peculiarities about hepatitis C that's different in terms of its spread compared to hepatitis B is that hepatitis C is not easily spread by sexual contact. So the CDC does not recommend that monogamous partners, husbands and wives or steady partners, need to change their sexual practices, because it's quite rare to have the virus be spread by that mode of contact.

ANNOUNCER: Hepatitis C can also often infect health care workers, through accidental needle sticks. People who live with an infected person and share personal items, such as razors or toothbrushes, are also at risk. Unfortunately, there is no vaccine for hepatitis C.

EMMET KEEFFE, MD: There's active research underway, but there's been a number of obstacles to vaccine development, because hepatitis C is a very tricky virus. There's a lot of mutations that occur, a lot of different flavors of the virus, if you will. So we don't have a vaccine for C.

ANNOUNCER: If a person does become infected, several treatments are available.

Page 1 of 2 Next Page >>

CONDITIONS
Acne
ADHD
Alopecia (Hair Loss)
ALS
Alzheimer's Disease
Amblyopia (Lazy Eye)
Anemia
Angina
Ankle Injuries
Aortic Stenosis
Arthritis-General
Asthma
Athlete's Foot
Autism
Back Pain
Bell's Palsy
Bipolar Disorder
Bladder Control
BPH/Enlarged
Prostate

Breast Cancer
Bronchitis
Bruxism
Bunions
Calluses
Cancer Pain
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome
Cataracts
Cerebral Palsy
Chest Pain
Chlamydia/NGU
Chronic Cough
Chronic Pain
Colon Cancer
Color Vision Deficiency
Common Cold
Congestive Heart Failure
Corns
Cystic Fibrosis
Dementia
Depression
Dermatitis (Eczema)
Diabetes
Endocarditis
Epilepsy/Seizures
Erectile Dysfunction
Female Sexual Dysfunction
Fibromyalgia
Genital Herpes
Genital Warts
Glaucoma
Gout
Headache
Heart Attack
Heart Disease
Heel Pain
Hematuria
Hepatitis
High Cholesterol
HIV & AIDS
Hypertension (High Blood Pressure)
Incontinence
Ingrown Toenails
Insomnia
Interstitial Cystitis
Jet Lag
Kidney Cancer
Kidney Stones
Leukemia
Lung Cancer
Lupus
Lyme Disease
Macular Degeneration
Menopause
Migraine
Moles (Nevi)
Multiple Sclerosis
Neuropathy
Newborn Skin
Obstructive Sleep
Apnea (OSA)

Osteoarthritis
Osteoporosis
Overactive Bladder
Parkinson's Disease
Pelvic Inflammatory
Disease (PID)

Pharyngitis (Sore Throat)
Plantar Warts
PMS
Premature Ejaculation
Prostate Cancer
Psoriasis
Rash
Refractive Errors & Vision
Running Injuries
Shift Work & Sleep
Sinusitis
Skin Cancer
Sleep Stages
Stroke
Tear Duct Obstruction
Thyroid Cancer
Urinary Incontinence
Urinary Tract
Infection (UTI)

Vertigo
Yeast Infection
HEALTH & WELLNESS
Alcohol Abuse
Contraception
Meditation
Narcotic Abuse
Nutrition
Obesity/Overweight
Pregnancy & Nutrition
Smoking
Stress