scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Frequency of acute hepatitis C after needle stick injury and its treatment outcome.

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
Acute HCV is an uncommon disease to diagnose; it has favorable response to therapy if initiated early after a strict surveillance of patients for 8-16 weeks.
Abstract
Objective: To determine the frequency of acute HCV infection after needle stick injury and its treatment outcome. Methodology: Patients with HCV positive needle stick injury and reporting within 72 hours of incident were selected. Co-infections with HBV, HDV, HIV, hematological disorders and depression were excluded. Anti-HCV was done at presentation and those testing positive were excluded. HCV RNA was done after two weeks or anti-HCV after six weeks of incident. Those testing positive were kept under observation for 16 weeks for spontaneous resolution. After this period HCV RNA and Genotype were done and therapy with Peg-interferon was started. Rapid, early and sustained virological responses were checked. Results: Two hundred eight patients with HCV positive needle stick injury were selected, 10 (4.8%) developed acute HCV infection out of them one (10%) had spontaneous recovery during the observation period of 16 weeks. seven (77.8%) achieved rapid virological response and eight (88.9%) achieved sustained virological response. Conclusions: Acute HCV is an uncommon disease to diagnose; it has favorable response to therapy if initiated early after a strict surveillance of patients for 8-16 weeks.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The epidemiology of hepatitis C virus in Pakistan: systematic review and meta-analyses

TL;DR: To characterize hepatitis C virus (HCV) epidemiology in Pakistan and estimate the pooled mean HCV antibody prevalence in different risk populations, all available records of HCV incidence and/or prevalence from 1989 to 2016 were systematically reviewed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Case definitions for acute hepatitis C virus infection: a systematic review.

TL;DR: Although a single case definition for recent HCV is not warranted, a degree of standardization within specific study categories would enable improved cross-study comparison and more uniform evaluation of HCV prevention and management strategies.
Journal Article

Needle stick injuries in nurses at a tertiary health care facility

TL;DR: Needle stick injury is the most important occupational health hazard in nurses with alarmingly high rates and screening of nurses after needle stick injury and promotion of safety measures against it should be greatly encouraged.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hepatitis C virus viremic rate in the Middle East and North Africa: Systematic synthesis, meta-analyses, and meta-regressions

TL;DR: Though there is extensive variation in study-specific measures of HCV viremic rate, pooled mean estimates are similar regardless of risk population or subpopulation, country/subregion, HCV antibody prevalence in the background population, or sex.
Journal Article

Needle-stick injury: a rising bio-hazard.

TL;DR: Dental practitioners were at high risk of getting Needle Stick Injuries in dental offices because there was lack of practice of universal precautions.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A short course of pegylated interferon-alpha in acute HCV hepatitis

TL;DR: In patients with early (week 4) viral response, a short course of peg IFN‐α at a weekly dose >1.2 μg/kg, may be a valuable option for the treatment of acute HCV hepatitis.
Journal ArticleDOI

Epidemiology of needlesticks and other sharps injuries and injection safety practices in the Dominican Republic.

TL;DR: Injection practices at ICs were safer than those found at public hospitals, and preventive strategies to lower SIs in public hospitals should include regular training of hospital staff to minimize needle recapping and improper disposal, among other interventions to reduce the dangers of needles.
Journal Article

Acute hepatitis C virus infection: Diagnosis, pathogenesis, treatment.

TL;DR: Although important progress has been achieved in acute hepatitis C understanding, research continues to improve treatment regimens and to clarify mechanisms of viral clearance.
Journal ArticleDOI

Acute Hepatitis C Virus Infection

TL;DR: Data on injection drug users with repeated exposures to HCV reveal the presence of partially protective immunity, which suggests that vaccine-based approaches may be feasible and antiviral therapy with interferon-based regimens for acute HCV infection produces significantly higher sustained virological responses than observed for chronic infection.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dose-dependent and genotype-independent sustained virological response of a 12 week pegylated interferon alpha-2b treatment for acute hepatitis C

TL;DR: Early identification and treatment of AHC is likely to decrease the burden of chronic hepatitis, especially when caused by HCV genotype 1, and was significantly associated by multivariate analysis only with the higher PEG-IFN dosage.
Related Papers (5)