Limited time75% off all plans
Get the app

Viral Hepatitis

On this page

Hepatitis Viruses - The Nasty Lineup

⭐ Hepatitis B is a DNA virus; all others (A, C, D, E) are RNA viruses.

  • Classification: Grouped by genome & transmission.
    • RNA Viruses: HAV, HCV, HDV, HEV
    • DNA Virus: HBV
  • Transmission & Chronicity:
    • 📌 Vowels (A, E): Faecal-oral, Acute, No chronicity (Except HEV in immunocompromised).
    • Consonants (B, C, D): Parenteral/Sexual, Chronic potential.

Hepatitis virus comparison and genome diagrams

  • Hepatitis D (Delta): Defective virus, requires HBsAg for replication; superinfection (worse) or coinfection with HBV.

Hepatitis A & E - The Fleeting Foes

  • RNA viruses, faecal-oral transmission. Acute, self-limiting hepatitis; no chronic state (except rare HEV G3). 📌 Mnemonic: "Vowels to the bowels" (A & E).
FeatureHepatitis A (HAV)Hepatitis E (HEV)
TransmissionFaecal-oral (food/water)Faecal-oral (water); Zoonotic (pigs)
Incubation (wks)2-62-10
SeverityMilder, esp. childrenSevere in adults; fulminant risk
DiagnosisAnti-HAV IgMAnti-HEV IgM; HEV RNA
ComplicationsRare: cholestatic, relapsingFulminant; chronic (G3, immunosuppressed)
PreventionVaccine; hygieneHygiene; safe water; (Vaccine not routine in India)
🤰 PregnancyBenign↑↑ Mortality (20-30% 3rd trim. G1/G2)

Hepatitis B - The Persistent Peril

⭐ The presence of HBsAg for more than 6 months defines chronic Hepatitis B infection.

  • Transmission: Parenteral (needles, blood), perinatal (mother-to-child), sexual.
  • Risk of Chronicity: Perinatal >90%; Early childhood 25-30%; Adult <5%.
  • Key Serological Markers: 📌 Mnemonic: 'S'-Surface/Screening, 'c'-Core/Chronic, 'e'-Envelope/Extra-contagious.
MarkerInterpretation
HBsAgActive infection (Acute/Chronic)
Anti-HBsImmunity (Vaccine/Resolved)
Anti-HBc IgMAcute infection (<6 months)
Anti-HBc TotalPast/current exposure
HBeAgHigh replication, ↑ infectivity
Anti-HBeLow replication, ↓ infectivity (seroconv.)
  • Phases of Chronic HBV (HBsAg+ >6 months):
  • Treatment Consideration (Chronic HBV): HBV DNA >20,000 IU/mL (HBeAg+) or >2,000 IU/mL (HBeAg-) with ↑ALT or significant fibrosis/cirrhosis.

Hepatitis C - The Stealthy Scourge

  • RNA virus, high chronicity rate (>70%). Parenteral transmission (needles, blood).
  • Genotypes: 6 major (GT 1-6). India: GT3 most prevalent, followed by GT1.
  • Extrahepatic Manifestations (EHM): 📌 'C's: Cryoglobulinemia (mixed), Cutanea tarda (Porphyria), Cancer (HCC), CNS involvement, Cardiomyopathy, Membranoproliferative Glomerulonephritis (MPGN). HCV extrahepatic manifestations diagram
  • Diagnosis: Anti-HCV antibodies (screen); HCV RNA PCR (confirms active infection, monitors treatment response).
  • Treatment: Direct-Acting Antivirals (DAAs).
    • Goal: SVR12 (Sustained Virologic Response 12 weeks post-treatment) = cure.
    • Pan-genotypic regimens (e.g., Sofosbuvir/Velpatasvir) are preferred.
  • ⭐ > Mixed cryoglobulinemia is a well-known extrahepatic manifestation of chronic Hepatitis C infection.

Hepatitis D - The Dependent Deviant

  • Defective RNA virus; requires HBsAg for replication & transmission.
FeatureCoinfection (HBV + HDV simultaneously)Superinfection (HDV in chronic HBV)
TimingAcute, self-limited (usually)Acute exacerbation, often chronic
SeveritySevere acute hepatitis; ↑ fulminant risk↑↑ Fulminant hepatitis, cirrhosis risk
IgM anti-HDVTransiently positivePersistently positive
IgG anti-HDVAppears late, may persistAppears early, high titres
  • Diagnosis: Anti-HDV antibodies (IgM, IgG), HDV RNA.
  • No specific treatment for HDV; HBV vaccination prevents HDV coinfection. PegIFN-alpha (low success).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • HAV: Fecal-oral transmission, acute infection only; IgM anti-HAV diagnoses.
  • HBV: Parenteral/sexual transmission; chronic risk (cirrhosis, HCC); HBsAg (infection), Anti-HBs (immunity), HBeAg (infectivity).
  • HCV: Primarily parenteral (IVDU); high chronic infection risk (cirrhosis, HCC); HCV RNA confirms active infection.
  • HDV: Defective virus requiring HBV co-infection or superinfection (worse prognosis).
  • HEV: Fecal-oral (waterborne); high mortality in pregnant women (genotypes 1,2); chronic in immunosuppressed.
  • HBV window period: Anti-HBc IgM is the sole serological marker.
  • Vaccines: Available for HAV & HBV; no vaccine for HCV.

Continue reading on Oncourse

Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.

CONTINUE READING — FREE

or get the app

Rezzy — Oncourse's AI Study Mate

Have doubts about this lesson?

Ask Rezzy, your AI Study Mate, to explain anything you didn't understand

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

START FOR FREE