Diseases & Conditions

View All Service Areas

Discover how The Mount Sinai Medical Center can offer you the most advanced and compassionate inpatient and outpatient care.

Clinical Trials

Participating in Mount Sinai’s clinical trials allows you to take advantage of innovative treatments as we work together to advance the future of medicine.

Hepatitis C

by Rick Alan

Definition

Hepatitis C is an infection of the liver. It is caused by the hepatitis C virus (HCV).

© 2009 Nucleus Medical Media, Inc.

Causes

HCV is carried in the blood of people infected with the virus. It is most often spread through contact with infected blood, such as:

  • Injecting illicit drugs with shared needles
  • Receiving HCV-infected blood transfusions (before 1992) or blood clotting products (before 1987)
  • Receiving an HCV-infected organ transplant
  • Receiving long-term kidney dialysis treatment (machine can be tainted with HCV-infected blood)
  • Sharing toothbrushes, razors, nail clippers, or other personal hygiene items that have HCV-infected blood on them
  • Being accidentally stuck by an HCV-infected needle—a concern for healthcare workers
  • Frequent contact with HCV-infected people—a concern for healthcare workers
  • Receiving a tattoo, body piercing, or acupuncture with unsterilized or improperly sterilized equipment

Hepatitis C can also spread through:

  • An HCV-infected mother to her baby at the time of birth
  • Sexual contact with someone infected with HCV
  • Sharing a straw or inhalation tube when inhaling drugs with someone infected by HCV
  • Receiving a blood transfusion

HCV cannot spread through:

  • The air
  • Unbroken skin
  • Casual social contact
  • Breastfeeding

Risks

Factors that increase your chance of this infection:

  • Receiving a blood transfusion before 1992
  • Receiving blood clotting products before 1987
  • Long-term kidney dialysis treatment
  • Tattooing
  • Body piercing
  • Injecting illicit drugs, especially with shared needles
  • Having sex with partners who have hepatitis C or other sexually transmitted diseases

Symptoms

Eighty percent of people with hepatitis C have no symptoms. Over time, the disease can cause serious liver damage.

Symptoms may include:

  • Fatigue
  • Loss of appetite
  • Jaundice (yellowing of the eyes and skin)
  • Darker colored urine
  • Light or chalky colored stools
  • Loose, light-colored stools
  • Abdominal pain
  • Aches and pains
  • Itching
  • Hives
  • Joint pain
  • Cigarette smokers may suddenly dislike the taste of cigarettes
  • Nausea
  • Vomiting

Chronic hepatitis C infection may cause some of the above symptoms, as well as:

  • Weakness
  • Severe fatigue
  • Loss of appetite

Serious complications of hepatitis C infection include:

  • chronic infection that will lead to cirrhosis (scarring) and progressive liver failure
  • Increased risk of liver cancer

Diagnosis

Your doctor will ask about your symptoms and medical history. A physical exam will be done. You will also discuss your risk factors.

Tests may include:

  • Blood tests—to look for hepatitis C antibodies or genetic material from the virus (antibodies are proteins that your body has made to fight the hepatitis C virus)
  • Liver function studies— to initially determine and follow how well your liver is functioning
  • Ultrasound of the liver— to assess liver damage
  • Liver biopsy —removal of a sample of liver tissue to be examined

Treatment

Hepatitis C is usually treated with combined therapy, consisting of :

  • Interferon—given by injection
  • Ribavirin —given orally

These medications can cause difficult side effects. They also have limited success rates.

In unsuccessful cases, chronic hepatitis C can cause cirrhosis (scarring) and serious liver damage. A liver transplant may be needed.

If you are diagnosed with hepatitis C, follow your doctor's instructions .

Prevention

To prevent becoming infected with hepatitis C:

  • Do not inject illicit drugs. Shared needles have highest risk. Seek help to stop using drugs.
  • Do not have sex with partners who have STDs.
  • Practice safe sex (using latex condoms ) or abstain from sex.
  • Limit your number of sexual partners.
  • Do not share personal items that might have blood on them, such as:
    • Razors
    • Toothbrushes
    • Manicuring tools
    • Pierced earrings
  • Avoid handling items that may be contaminated by HCV-infected blood.
  • Donate your own blood before elective surgery to be used if you need a blood transfusion.

To prevent spreading hepatitis C to others if you are infected:

  • Tell your dentist and physician before receiving check-ups or treatment.
  • Get both a hepatitis A and hepatitis B vaccination.
  • Do not donate blood or organs for transplant.

Last reviewed October 2009 by David L. Horn, MD, FACP

All EBSCO Publishing proprietary, consumer health and medical information found on this site is accredited by URAC. URAC's Health Web Site Accreditation Program requires compliance with 53 rigorous standards of quality and accountability, verified by independent audits.

Please be aware that this information is provided to supplement the care provided by your physician. It is neither intended nor implied to be a substitute for professional medical advice. CALL YOUR HEALTHCARE PROVIDER IMMEDIATELY IF YOU THINK YOU MAY HAVE A MEDICAL EMERGENCY. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider prior to starting any new treatment or with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.

Copyright © 2007 EBSCO Publishing. All rights reserved.

Physician Spotlight

Clinical Interests
  • Liver Disease
  • Colonoscopy
  • Internal Medicine
  • Gastroenterology
  • Endoscopy
  • HIV-Related Liver Disease
  • Hepatitis
  • Hepatitis C
Clinical Interests
  • Liver Disease
  • Hepatobiliary Disease
  • Intestinal Transplantation
  • Live Donor Liver Transplant
  • Liver Transplant
  • Nutrition in Liver Disease
  • Viral Hepatitis
Clinical Interests
  • Hepatitis C
  • Cirrhosis
  • Gastroenterology
  • Internal Medicine
  • Alcoholic Liver Disease
  • Autoimmune Liver Disease
  • Hepatitis
  • Surgery, Liver

Hepatitis C Clinical Trials

(800) MD-SINAI (800) 637-4624

Visit Mount Sinai Queens