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Infection
With The Hepatitis B Virus During Pregnancy By
Groshan
Fabiola
In some
countries, the infection with hepatitis B
virus is most common during pregnancy. One can also be infected with
the hepatitis B virus in his/ her early childhood. To gain some control
over this method of transmitting hepatitis means to have a very good
idea about the infection with the hepatitis B virus during pregnancy.
This
knowledge of the infection with the hepatitis B virus when pregnant
gives a good view on some of the following things: - the
mortality rate of the person carrying the hepatitis virus; -
the effect of the hepatitis B virus on the parturition process; -
most important, the capability of the hepatitis virus to be transmitted
to the foetus;
There are tests that can show can
show the seroprevelance of the hepatitis B virus in a pregnant women.
The infection with hepatitis can be either acute or chronic. The acute
infection with the hepatitis B virus means that this infection happened
only during and the person was otherwise healthy, whereas the
chronic infection shows that the infection with the hepatitis B virus
was previous to the pregnancy.
Studies have
shown that the hepatitis B infection is not perdilect to pregnant women
and the percentage of non pregnant women suffering from hepatitis B is
almost the same of those pregnant. More, the acute form of hepatitis B
does not have more severe symptoms in pregnant women than in the non
pregnant ones.
The symptoms for viral
hepatitis are the same: fatigue, headache, nausea, vomiting. The last two hepatitis symptoms
may be also mistaken for symptoms in women that do not suffer from hepatitis. If
hepatitis resolves before there is a great liver injury, the symptoms
of hepatitis may also be passes off as flu symptoms or even as effects
of the itself. In most of the cases, the acute hepatitis
symptoms will pass in about six weeks.
If a
pregnant women suffers from acute hepatitis, this may induce a
premature labour, especially if she is in the last trimester. However,
this has little or no effect on the foetus.
Chronic
hepatitis is a very serious condition that has no symptoms. A person
may develop hepatitis symptoms when this disease has done many damage
to the liver. Most of the women that become pregnant, find out that
they suffer from chronic hepatitis after they go to an obstetrician. For
more resources about hepatitis c symptoms please review
www.hepatitis-guide.com/hepatitis-c-transmission.htm
or even www.hepatitis-guide.com/hepatitis-c-treatment.htm
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