Hepatitis B
What is hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B is a virus
that infects the liver. Most adults who get hepatitis
B have it for a short time and then get better. This is called acute hepatitis
B.
You can have hepatitis B
and not know it. You may not have symptoms. If you do, they can make you feel
like you have the flu. But as long as you have the virus, you can
spread it to others.
Sometimes the virus
causes a long-term infection, called chronic hepatitis B. Over time, it can
damage your liver. Babies and young children infected with
the virus are more likely to get chronic hepatitis B.
What causes hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B is caused by
the hepatitis B virus. It is spread through contact with the blood and body fluids of an infected person.
You may get hepatitis B
if you:
- Have sex with an infected person without using a condom.
- Share needles (used for
injecting drugs) with an infected person.
- Get a tattoo or piercing with tools
that were not cleaned well.
- Share personal items like
razors or toothbrushes with an infected person.
A mother who has the
virus can pass it to her baby during delivery. If you are pregnant
and think you may have been exposed to hepatitis B, get tested. If you have the
virus, your baby can get shots to help prevent infection with the virus.
You cannot get
hepatitis B from casual contact such as hugging, kissing, sneezing, coughing,
or sharing food or drinks.
What are the symptoms?
Many people with
hepatitis B do not know they have it, because they do not have symptoms. If you
do have symptoms, you may just feel like you have the flu. Symptoms include:
- Feeling very tired.
- Mild fever.
- Headache.
- Not wanting to eat.
- Feeling sick to your stomach or vomiting.
- Belly pain.
- Diarrhea or constipation.
- Muscle aches and joint pain.
- Skin rash.
- Yellowish eyes and skin (jaundice). Jaundice usually appears only
after other symptoms have started to go away.
Most people with chronic
hepatitis B have no symptoms.
How is hepatitis B diagnosed?
A simple blood test can
tell your doctor if you have the hepatitis B virus now or if you had it in the
past. Your doctor also may be able to tell if you have had the vaccine to
prevent the virus.
If your doctor thinks you
may have liver damage from hepatitis B, he or she may use a needle to take a
tiny sample of your liver for testing. This is called a liver
biopsy.
How is it treated?
In most cases, hepatitis
B goes away on its own. You can relieve your symptoms at home by resting,
eating healthy foods, drinking plenty of water, and avoiding alcohol and drugs.
Also, find out from your doctor what medicines and herbal products to avoid,
because some can make liver damage caused by hepatitis B worse.
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