Hepatits Flashcards

1
Q

Which hepatitis are mostly co infections?

A

B and D

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2
Q

Hepatitis E is worst in…. And found mainly in which part of the world?

A

Pregnancy

East asia

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3
Q

Which hepatitis can be acquired perinatally?

A

B, C, D (sex, blood, mom)

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4
Q

Which hepatitis can you acquire with consuming water or food?

A

A and E

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5
Q

Which hepatitis rarely presents in acute form?

A

C

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6
Q

Sx of hepatitis

A

Jaundice, fever, weight loss, fatigue, dark urine, hepatosplenomegaly, abdo pain

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7
Q

What does the lab look like in viral hepatitis?

A

Increased direct bili, increased ALT>AST (viraL), increased alkaline phosphatase, aplastic anemia is a rare complication

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8
Q

What test in hepatitis correlates with increased mortality?

A

Prothrombin time: 70-80% of the liver is dead if prothrombin time is up (all coag factors are made in liver except 8 and VWF)

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9
Q

Best initial test for hepatitis A, C, D and E?

A

IgM antibody: acute infection

IgG antibody: resolution of infection

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10
Q

Hepatitis C disease activity measured with

A

PCR RNA level : amount of active viral replication

If PCR rises it shows treatment failure

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11
Q

Serologic pattern for hep B

A

Surface antigen: indicates presence of virus; + in acute or chronic infections, - in resolved infection
E antigen: degree of viral replication
Surface antibody if + could be vaccine, so look at core (vaccine gives no core), if core + then it means resolved, past infection if IgG, acute or chronic if IgM or IgG

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12
Q

Serology hep B window period

A

Surface antigen, e antigen and surface antibody negatives

Core antigen positive IgM then IgG

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13
Q

Which serologic marker becomes abnormal first in hep B?

A

Surface antigen

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14
Q

Which serologic marker in hep B correlates directly with the amount of viral replication?

A

E antigen

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15
Q

Which serologic marker in hepatitis B shows the infection is on the way to resolution?

A

Anti hep B e antibody

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16
Q

The best serologic marker in hep B that indicates that a woman can transmit the disease to her baby is?

A

E antigen 90% chances!

17
Q

A carrier of hep B would have which serology?

A

Surface antigen + and that is it

18
Q

Which markers in hep B would indicate that you cannot transmit the infection

A

No surface antigen found

19
Q

Which is the best indication of the need for treatment in chronic hepatitis B?

A

E antigen

20
Q

What is the treatment for hep A?

A

Resolves spontaneously over weeks, almost always benign

21
Q

What is the treatment for hep E?

A

Resolves spontaneously over weeks, almost always benign

22
Q

What is the percentage of hep B that becomes chronic?

A

10%

23
Q

What is the treatment for acute hep B?

A

None

24
Q

What is the treatment for acute hep C?

A

Interferon, ribavirin and either telaprevir or boceprevir, decreases likelihood of developping chronic infection

25
Q

Chronic hepatitis B is dx when

A

Surface antigen is positive for longer than 6 months

26
Q

When to treat for chronic hep B?

A

Both surface antigen + (more than 6 months) and e antigen +

27
Q

What is the tx for hep B?

A

(one drug!)
Entecavir or adefovir or tenofovir or lamivudine or telbivudine or interferon (but has lots of adverse effects and no greater efficacy - flu like sx, plus it is injectable)

28
Q

Adverse effects of interferon?

A

Arthralgia, myalgia, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, depression and flu like sx

29
Q

Goal of hep B therapy?

A

Convert e antigen in e antibody

30
Q

What test determines if you treat hep C?

A

PCR-RNA viral load elevated : treat with 3 drugs interferon ribavirin and either telaprevir or boceprevir

31
Q

What are side effects of ribavirin?

A

Anemia