HEPATITIS C
|
Structure
& Property |
Transmission |
Pathogenesis |
Clinical
findings |
Laboratory
diagnosis |
Treatment |
|
Family: flavivirus Genome: single-strand RNA, +ve polarity. Icosahedral nucleocapsid Enveloped virion No polymerase Multiple serotypes |
Sexual contact Blood Perinatally from mother to child |
Infects hepatocytes primarily. For patients who clear infection, not known whether reinfection can occur or if there is lifelong immunity. |
Incubation period: 8 weeks. Many infections are asymptomatic and detected only by presence of antibody. Acute infection is milder disease than Hepatitis B. Chronic hepatitis follows acute infection in 60% of patients, 20% go on to develop cirrhosis. Chronic hepatitis C is now recognized as an important cause of primary liver cancer. |
Diagnosis: detection of antibodies to HCV in an ELISA. Direct demonstration: PCR on blood samples detects viral RNA and indicates infectivity. Cell cannot be cultivated in cell culture. |
Interferon-alpha used in treatment of chronic hepatitis C; it mitigates symptoms but does not eliminate carrier state. Screening of blood for transfusion for presence of HCV antibody. |