Saturday, January 2, 2010

Hepatitis C Statistics Hepatitis C?

Hepatitis C? - hepatitis c statistics

I need to know everything about it! I checked the Wikipedia and I found everything I need, I help people!

What are the symptoms?
What are the causes and how a person be successful?
Is there a cure? If so, what are they?
Hepatitis C can lead to death (death)?
Is it contagious, or can a person born with it?
And I want everything you know know about it! Data, statistics, etc. Thanks!

1 comments:

cindy132... said...

There are far too hepatitis C virus (HCV) who have said for a long time for everyone here to learn. Http: / / www.hcvadvocate.org recommend that you visit the website and click on "Fact Sheets". It is a very comprehensive site with very precise information. In short, here some information for you to start with:
Symptoms: Often there are none, which explains why so many people diagnosed with HCV, until it progresses. Subtle symptoms are pain, fatigue, joint pain, pain. Often, these symptoms can be attributed to other things (too much work, age, etc..)
Causes: are risk factors for transmission:
Blood transfusions before 1992, many years, only a long intravenous drugs, tattoos, piercings, the mother-child transmission during childbirth kinda (rare: less than 5%), sharing toothbrushes or razors with an infected person, even if they know that dialysis, blood exposure to medical personnel (doctors, nurses, EMT, ambulance, etc.), recipients of organ transplants and, rarely, sex, if the blood is exchanged (as in Collateral DamageKinky Sex, sex, MSM, etc..)
Cures: The standard treatment of HCV on weekly injections of pegylated interferon and ribavirin pills daily for a year (or less) depending on the genotype. It is a mild form of chemotherapy and side effects can be managed through education of patients, support and other drugs. The success rate is 50-57% for genotype 1 (the most common form of the virus in the United States), and 80% or more for genotype 2 and 3
HCV can be ignored in death if not diagnosed until it is too late. The liver is very difficult and the symptoms are so subtle that the damage done to a significant amount of progress. There are many variables that the amount that the liver is damaged to affect. If someone has HCV and continue to drink alcohol, the virus replicates rapidly and the damage has occurred faster. If someone co-damaged faster with both forms of hepatitis, including hepatitis B (HBV) and HCV infection is the liver. Furthermore, exposure to drugs () and non-prescription drugs such as acetaminophen in high doses or an overdose of prescription drugs may increase the damage tor liver faster.
It is contagious, if the blood of an infected person in contact with the blood of an infected person. (see the risk factors for the transmission above).
+ About 10,000 people die each year waiting for a liver, so if you have hepatitis C, it is better to live a healthy life and try to treat it as advanced liver disease is not cause for concern.
You can see some questions and answers can be read here:
http://answers.yahoo.com/my/my; _ylt = AiKx ...
I was in the summer of 2000, the diagnosis and treatment began in August has not been seen in November and have been cleared of the virus, since (7 years). I facilitated a support group for the past 6 years and have seen many people come and walk through our doors. I also saw a decline in the number of people who receive a liver transplant because of improved treatment of drug over the years. Even if the treatment is not known 100% effective for all, the success rate (SVR) has increased greatly in recent years. Hope this helps. Education is a powerful, a support group and learn as muchas you can. Best wishes.

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