HEPATITIS G
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HGV, also called hepatitis GB virus, was first
described early in 1996. Little is known about the frequency of HGV
infection, the nature of the illness, or how to prevent it. What is
known is that transfused blood containing HGV has caused some cases
of hepatitis. For this reason, patients with hemophilia and other
bleeding conditions who require large amounts of blood or blood
products are at risk of hepatitis G. HGV has been identified in
between 1-2% of blood donors in the United States. Also at risk are
patients with kidney disease who have blood exchange by hemodialysis,
and those who inject drugs into their veins. It is possible that an
infected mother can pass on the virus to her newborn infant. Sexual
transmission also is a possibility.
Often patients with hepatitis G are infected at
the same time by the hepatitis B or C virus, or both. In about three
of every thousand patients with acute viral hepatitis, HGV is the
only virus present. There is some indication that patients with
hepatitis G may continue to carry the virus in their blood for many
years, and so might be a source of infection in others. |
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| HEPATITIS G RELATED ITEMS |
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