Hepatitis B
Hepatitis B is a viral liver infection caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). It can present as an acute illness, but importantly, HBV can also cause chronic (long-term) infection that may lead to serious complications like cirrhosis (scarring of the liver) and liver cancer. Hepatitis B is a major global health problem, with hundreds of millions chronically infected worldwide. The virus is transmitted through blood and bodily fluids. Thankfully, a very effective vaccine exists to prevent HBV infection.
Symptoms
Acute hepatitis B : Many people have no symptoms when first infected (especially children). If symptoms do occur, they typically develop 1 to 4 months after exposure. Acute HBV infection can cause symptoms similar to other hepatitis types:
Symptoms may last a few weeks to a few months. Most healthy adults will clear the virus and recover from acute hepatitis B infection spontaneously. A small proportion can develop fulminant hepatitis (a sudden, severe liver failure), which is life-threatening, but this is rare.
Causes
Hepatitis B is caused by the hepatitis B virus, which is transmitted through blood or other body fluids. Major modes of HBV transmission include:
HBV is much more infectious than HIV. It is not spread through casual contact like hugging, kissing, or sharing food, nor through coughing or sneezing. However, sharing personal items that may have microscopic blood (razors, toothbrushes) could potentially spread HBV and should be avoided.
One critical factor is the age at infection: Infections in infancy or early childhood very often become chronic (the immune system fails to clear the virus), whereas infections acquired in adulthood are cleared in >90–95% of cases. This is why vaccinating infants and children is so important.
Diagnosis
Hepatitis B is diagnosed with blood tests. Key tests include:
Liver function tests (ALT, AST) will usually be elevated in acute hepatitis or active chronic hepatitis, signaling liver inflammation. Doctors may also evaluate liver damage with imaging (ultrasound, FibroScan) or occasionally a liver biopsy if needed, especially in chronic cases to assess fibrosis.
Treatment
Acute hepatitis B: There is no specific antiviral treatment for acute HBV infection – the immune system usually clears the virus on its own. Supportive care (rest, fluids, nutrition) is the main approach. Patients are monitored to ensure liver tests return to normal. Severe acute hepatitis (fulminant hepatic failure) is rare; if it occurs, antiviral therapy and intensive care support (or emergency liver transplant) may be necessary.
Chronic hepatitis B: Treatment is aimed at preventing liver damage and complications. Not everyone with chronic HBV needs immediate medication – it depends on levels of the virus and liver enzyme tests or evidence of liver injury. The main treatments are antiviral medications that suppress HBV replication: