Overview
Acute viral hepatitis is a sudden inflammation of the liver caused by infection with one of several hepatitis viruses (most commonly hepatitis A, B, C, D, or E). The condition usually develops within weeks after exposure and can range from a mild, selfâlimited illness to severe liver dysfunction.
- Who it affects: All ages can be infected, but incidence varies by virus and geography. HepatitisâŻA andâŻE are most common in children and travelers to lowâincome regions, whereas hepatitisâŻB andâŻC affect adults through sexual contact, injection drug use, or perinatal transmission.
- Prevalence: According to the World Health Organization (WHO), in 2022 there were an estimated:
- ââŻ1.4âŻmillion new cases of hepatitisâŻA annually.
- ââŻ296âŻmillion people living with chronic hepatitisâŻB andâŻC; a fraction of these experience acute flareâups each year.
- ââŻ20âŻmillion new hepatitisâŻE infections, primarily in Asia and Africa.
Symptoms
Symptoms usually appear 2â6 weeks after exposure and may last from a few days to several weeks. Not everyone experiences every symptom.
| Symptom | Description |
|---|---|
| Fatigue | Persistent tiredness that interferes with daily activities. |
| Jaundice | Yellowing of the skin and eyes due to elevated bilirubin. |
| Dark urine | Urine becomes teaâcolored because of bilirubin excretion. |
| Pale stools | Stools lose their normal brown color. |
| Abdominal pain | Often a dull ache in the upper right quadrant where the liver sits. |
| Nausea & vomiting | May accompany loss of appetite. |
| Fever & chills | Lowâgrade fever is common, especially with hepatitisâŻA andâŻE. |
| Loss of appetite | Feeling âfullâ quickly, leading to weight loss. |
| Muscle aches | Generalized body aches, similar to fluâlike illness. |
| Itching (pruritus) | Occasional skin itching due to bile salt deposition. |
Causes and Risk Factors
The âviralâ part of the name indicates the underlying cause: infection with a hepatitis virus. Each virus has distinct transmission routes.
HepatitisâŻA (HAV)
- Fecalâoral transmission â contaminated food or water.
- Close contact with an infected person (e.g., household, daycare).
- Risk factors: travel to endemic areas, inadequate sanitation, men who have sex with men (MSM).
HepatitisâŻB (HBV)
- Bloodâborne and sexual transmission.
- Perinatal transmission from mother to infant.
- Risk factors: unprotected sex, injection drug use, healthâcare workers, tattoos/piercings with nonâsterile equipment.
HepatitisâŻC (HCV)
- Primarily bloodâborne.
- Risk factors: sharing needles, inadequate sterilization of medical equipment, transfusion of unscreened blood (rare in highâincome countries).
HepatitisâŻD (HDV)
- Requires coâinfection with HBV.
- Risk factors mirror HBV.
HepatitisâŻE (HEV)
- Fecalâoral, similar to HAV, but often linked to undercooked pork or wild game.
- Higher severity in pregnant women.
General Risk Enhancers
- Living in or traveling to regions with poor sanitation.
- Having a chronic liver disease (e.g., cirrhosis) â infections can become more severe.
- Immunosuppression (HIV, organ transplant, chemotherapy).
Diagnosis
Diagnosis combines clinical suspicion with laboratory and imaging studies.
Laboratory Tests
- Liver function panel: Elevated alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and aspartate aminotransferase (AST) often >10Ă the upper limit of normal. Bilirubin, alkaline phosphatase, and INR may also rise.
- Serologic assays:
- AntiâHAV IgM â indicates acute hepatitisâŻA.
- HBsAg + antiâHBc IgM â acute hepatitisâŻB.
- AntiâHCV IgM or HCV RNA PCR â acute hepatitisâŻC.
- AntiâHEV IgM â acute hepatitisâŻE.
- Viral load PCR: Quantifies viral RNA/DNA for HBV, HCV, HDV; useful for prognosis.
Imaging
- Abdominal ultrasound: Rules out biliary obstruction and evaluates liver size, texture, and signs of acute inflammation.
- CT or MRI rarely needed unless complications (e.g., hepatic necrosis) are suspected.
Other Assessments
- Complete blood count â may show mild leukopenia or thrombocytopenia.
- Coagulation profile â prolonged INR suggests impaired synthetic function.
Treatment Options
Most acute viral hepatitis cases are selfâlimited and require supportive care. Antiviral therapy is virusâspecific and indicated only for certain infections.
Supportive Care (All Types)
- Rest and adequate hydration.
- Balanced diet â emphasize protein, complex carbs, and healthy fats; avoid alcohol and hepatotoxic drugs (e.g., acetaminophen >2âŻg/day).
- Management of nausea: antiâemetics such as ondansetron.
- Control of itching: cholestyramine or antihistamines.
VirusâSpecific Therapies
- HepatitisâŻA &âŻE: No specific antiviral; recovery is usually complete within 2â3âŻmonths.
- HepatitisâŻB:
- Antiviral agents (e.g., tenofovir, entecavir) are reserved for severe acute hepatitis, fulminant liver failure, or patients at high risk of chronicity (immunocompromised, >40âŻy, high viral load).
- HepatitisâŻC:
- Directâacting antivirals (DAAs) are standard for chronic infection; acute infection may be observed, but treatment is considered if rapid progression is evident.
- HepatitisâŻD:
- Pegylated interferonâα is the only approved therapy, but response rates are modest.
Procedures for Severe Cases
- Hospitalization: Indicated for encephalopathy, coagulopathy (INRâŻ>âŻ1.5), or rapid bilirubin rise.
- Liver transplant: Considered in fulminant hepatic failure when MELD score >âŻ30 or when there is no improvement after 48â72âŻhours of intensive care.
Living with Acute Viral Hepatitis
While the disease is usually shortâterm, following a structured plan can ease symptoms and protect the liver.
Daily Management Tips
- Hydration: Aim for 2â3âŻliters of water daily unless fluid restriction is ordered.
- Nutrition: Small, frequent meals; incorporate fruits, vegetables, and lean protein. Limit saturated fats and fried foods.
- Avoid Alcohol & Drugs: Alcohol can worsen liver injury; avoid recreational drugs and limit overâtheâcounter medications that affect the liver.
- Sleep: 7â9âŻhours/night to aid immune recovery.
- Medication Review: Discuss all prescriptions and supplements with your provider; some herbs (e.g., kava, comfrey) are hepatotoxic.
- Followâup Labs: Repeat liver function tests every 1â2âŻweeks until normalization.
- Vaccination: If you had hepatitisâŻA, you are protected; otherwise, get HAV and HBV vaccines after recovery.
Emotional Support
- Join support groups (e.g., Hepatitis Foundation). Depression is common; seek counseling if mood changes persist.
Prevention
- Vaccination: Safe, effective vaccines exist for hepatitisâŻA andâŻB. The WHO recommends universal infant HBV vaccination and HAV vaccination for travelers and highârisk groups.
- Safe Food & Water: Drink bottled or boiled water, peel fruits, avoid raw shellfish in endemic regions.
- Safe Sex: Use condoms, limit number of partners, and get screened regularly.
- Injection Safety: Never share needles; use sterile equipment for tattoos or piercings.
- Hand Hygiene: Wash hands with soap after using the bathroom and before handling food.
- Maternal Screening: Pregnant women should be screened for HBV and HEV; antiviral prophylaxis may be indicated for high HBV viral loads.
Complications
Most acute infections resolve without lasting damage, but complications can arise, especially in highârisk individuals.
- Fulminant hepatic failure: Rapid loss of liver function, encephalopathy, coagulopathy; mortality >âŻ70âŻ% without transplant.
- Chronic infection: HBV, HCV, and HDV can become chronic, leading to cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and liver failure.
- Coâinfection interaction: For example, HAV superinfection in chronic HBV/HCV patients markedly increases mortality.
- Renal dysfunction: Acute kidney injury occurs in up to 15âŻ% of fulminant cases.
- Pancreatitis: Reported in severe hepatitisâŻA andâŻE.
When to Seek Emergency Care
- Sudden confusion, drowsiness, or inability to stay awake (hepatic encephalopathy).
- Severe abdominal pain that worsens rapidly.
- Vomiting blood (hematemesis) or passing black, tarâlike stools (melena) â signs of gastrointestinal bleeding.
- Jaundice accompanied by a fever >âŻ38.5âŻÂ°C (101.3âŻÂ°F) and chills.
- Rapid increase in abdominal girth (possible ascites) or swelling of the legs.
- Bleeding gums, easy bruising, or bleeding from the nose â indicating coagulopathy.
- Signs of dehydration despite fluid intake (dry mouth, dizziness, rapid heartbeat).
If you have a known chronic liver disease, any worsening of symptoms should prompt immediate medical evaluation.
References
- World Health Organization. Hepatitis Fact Sheets. 2023.
- Mayo Clinic. Acute Hepatitis. Updated 2024.
- CDC. Hepatitis A, B, C, D, and E â Prevention & Treatment. 2024.
- National Institutes of Health. Hepatitis B and C Treatment Guidelines. 2023.
- Cleveland Clinic. Acute Liver Failure. 2024.
- European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL). Clinical Practice Guidelines for Hepatitis. 2022.