What the Hell is Hepatitis A?

What is hepatitis A?

Hepatitis A is one of five human hepatitis viruses (hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E) that primarily infect the liver and cause illness. An estimated 80,000 cases occur each year in the U.S., although much higher estimates have been proposed based on mathematical modeling of the past incidence of infection. Each year, an estimated 100 persons die as a result of acute liver failure in the U.S. due to hepatitis A, but the rate of infection has dramatically decreased since the hepatitis A vaccine was licensed and became available in the U.S. in 1995.

Hepatitis A is a communicable (or contagious) disease that spreads from person-to-person. It is spread almost exclusively through fecal-oral contact, generally from person-to-person, or via contaminated food or water. Food contaminated with the virus is the most common vehicle transmitting hepatitis A. The food preparer or cook is the individual most often contaminating the food, although he or she is generally not ill at the time of food preparation. The peak time of infectivity, when the most virus is present in the stool of an infectious individual, is during the two weeks before illness begins. Although only a small percentage of hepatitis A infections are associated with foodborne transmission, foodborne outbreaks have been increasingly implicated as a significant source of hepatitis A infection.

Hepatitis A may also be spread by household contact among families or roommates, sexual contact, ingestion of contaminated water, ingestion of raw or undercooked fruits and vegetables or shellfish (like oysters), and from persons sharing illicit drugs. Children often have asymptomatic or unrecognized infections and can pass the virus through ordinary play to family members and other children and adults.

Symptoms of hepatitis A Infection

Hepatitis A infection may cause no symptoms at all when it is contracted, especially in children. Such individuals will only know they were infected (and have become immune ñ you can only get hepatitis A once) by getting a blood test later in life. The incubation period (from exposure to onset of symptoms) is 15-50 days, with an average of 30 days. Many children and most adults will experience the sudden onset of flu-like symptoms. After a day or two of muscle aches, headache, anorexia (loss of appetite), abdominal discomfort, fever and malaise, jaundice (also termed icterus) sets in. Jaundice is a yellowing of the skin, eyes and mucous membranes that occurs because bile flows poorly through the liver and backs up into the blood. The urine will turn dark with bile and the stool will be light or clay-colored from lack of bile. When jaundice sets in, the initial symptoms begin to subside.

In general, the period of acute illness lasts from 10 days to three weeks, at which time affected individuals tend to recapture some sense of wellness. It is not unusual for blood tests to remain abnormal for six months (or more), prolonging recovery for up to a year. Most affected individuals show complete recovery within three to six months of the onset of illness. Relapse is possible, and although more common in children, it does occur with some regularity in adults.

Diagnosis and treatment of hepatitis A

There are blood tests widely available to accurately diagnose hepatitis A; blood samples are tested for hepatitis antibodies, which are present when the immune system responds to the hepatitis virus. Antibodies of the immune globulin (Ig) M variety, which indicate acute disease, and IgG antibodies, which stay positive for life, should both be measured.

Hepatitis A infection is an acute self-limiting disease. There is no specific treatment; treatment and management is merely supportive. The liver function tests generally improve as the affected individual begins to feel better. It is therefore well accepted that the need for rest is best determined by the person’s own perception of the severity of fatigue or malaise.

Preventing hepatitis A Infection

Hepatitis A infection is totally preventable. Ill food-handlers should be excluded from work. Commercial food workers and other individuals who prepare food for others must always wash their hands with soap and water after using the bathroom, changing a diaper, and before preparing food. Cooking food to a temperature of 185∞F or higher will inactivate hepatitis A.

After a known exposure to hepatitis A, administration of a shot of immune globulin should be considered. If administered within two weeks of the exposure, it will usually be effective in preventing or at least ameliorating the disease.

Hepatitis A vaccine is the best protection from hepatitis A infection. The vaccine is recommended for persons traveling to areas with increased rates of hepatitis A, men who have sex with men, injecting and non-injecting drug users, persons with blood clotting factor disorders (such as hemophilia), persons with chronic liver disease, and children living in regions of the U.S. with increased rates of hepatitis A. The vaccine may also help protect household contacts of those with hepatitis A infection. Vaccination of food handlers would likely substantially diminish the incidence of hepatitis A outbreaks. The vaccine is licensed for individuals aged two and older, but there is good evidence that the vaccine is safe and effective at one year of age.

References

Lubbock's Cheddar's Casual Café Costs Public Health $250,000 Due to Hepatitis A

Lubbock Avalanche-Journal reports that leftover vaccines from a Hepatitis A scare last year will be administered to those who took the first vaccination in hopes of providing extended protection against the disease.

An employee at Cheddar’s Casual Café contracted the viral illness last September, potentially exposing anyone who ate at the restaurant.

Bridget Faulkenberry, director of the Health Department, said about 2,200 vaccinations are left over — some for children and some for adults — for those who took the first vaccine.

Since this vaccination is not mandatory, the department will charge $15 per vaccine. The Health Department spent about $240,000 on the initial doses of vaccine last September, Faulkenberry said.

The charge will help recuperate some of that money spent last year, Faulkenberry said.

She said she expects to have leftover vaccines this time around, too, as not everyone will take another one, and some people who took the first vaccine were from out of town.

The vaccines will be administered by nurses from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 3 and 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 5 in the Health Department at 1902 Texas Ave., Faulkenberry said.

The Health Department will send letters to those eligible for the vaccine, and the recipients must bring the letter to get the vaccination. The letter states clinic will be cash only.

About 2,700 people took the vaccine the first time, said Faulkenberry. There were no cases reported other than the initial one, Faulkenberry said.

Hepatitis A is a viral disease, affecting the liver and causing inflammation and malfunction of the liver cells, said Dr. Joe Sasin, medical director for the emergency department at University Medical Center.

Sasin said the second immunization, which is purely preventative, should last for several decades.

“It’s very, very important to get that second immunization, and high-risk groups definitely should get the vaccine,” Sasin said.

He said Hepatitis A usually is not life threatening unless dealing with the very young or very old, or people who have other health complications. Most people who have Hepatitis A get over it on their own, and are immune to it the rest of their lives.

Boise Idaho Cheesecake Factory Linked to Hepatitis A Risk

Screen Shot 2012-02-10 at 5.14.49 PM.pngAccording to the Idaho Statesman, an employee at the Cheesecake Factory on Milwaukee Avenue in Boise may have exposed some diners at the restaurant to Hepatitis A this winter. The Statesman's report is based on information from the Central District Health Department.

Health officials said the exposure may have occurred between Dec. 13 and Jan. 22.

The employee who was confirmed to have Hepatitis A wasn't involved in food preparation, and the risk to the public is "extremely low" -- but there was some possibility of exposure to diners, the health department said. The employee is said to have used good hand hygiene.

Hepatitis A is a liver disease caused by the hepatitis A virus. It is usually spread by eating or drinking food items that have been contaminated with hepatitis A from someone who hasn’t properly washed their hands after using the bathroom, but it is also spread easily when a person doesn't wash his or her hands after changing a baby's diaper.

Symptoms of the disease include: fever, loss of appetite, abdominal discomfort, jaundice, tiredness, nausea and dark urine. Anyone who ate at the Cheesecake Factory between Dec. 13. and Jan. 22 and has these symptoms is advised to see their doctor. Symptoms vary from mild to severe, lasting anywhere from a couple weeks to several months.

Health officials said the Cheesecake Factory, which is at 330 N. Milwaukee Ave., fully cooperated with the investigation.

Deadliest Outbreaks - Hepatitis A - Chi Chi's Restaurant Green Onions 2003

At least 565 cases of hepatitis A were associated with an outbreak at the Chi Chi’s Restaurant in Monaca, Pennsylvania, in 2003. There were 128 hospitalizations and three deaths. As a result of exposure to the restaurant food or outbreak cases, more than 9,000 persons were given an injection of immune globulin to prevent hepatitis A. Numerous secondary illnesses occurred when infected persons who had eaten at the restaurant infected their close contacts. This outbreak, and concurrent outbreaks, were associated with eating raw, or undercooked, green onions that had been grown in Mexico and served in restaurants.

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