In medicine (gastroenterology), hepatitis is any disease featuring inflammation of the liver. The clinical signs and prognosis, as well as the therapy, depend on the cause.
Signs and symptoms
Hepatitis is characterised by abdominal pain, fever, hepatomegaly (enlarged liver) and jaundice (icterus). Some chronic forms of hepatitis show very few of these signs and only present when the longstanding inflammation has led to the replacement of liver cells by connective tissue; the result is cirrhosis.
Causes
Viral
Most hepatitis cases are due to viral infections:
- Hepatitis A
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis C
- D-agent (requires presence of the hepatitis B virus)
- Hepatitis E
- Please see the respective articles for more detailed information
Hepatitis A is an enterovirus transmitted by the orofecal route, such as contaminated food. It causes an acute form of hepatitis and does not have a chronic stage. IgG antibodies remain detectable, conferring some immunity against future infection.
Hepatitis B causes both acute and chronic hepatitis in some patients who are unable to eliminate the virus. It is transmitted by blood (blood transfusion, now rare), sexually or vertically (from mother to her unborn child). Blood contact can occur by sharing syringes in intravenous drug use, prompting needle-exchange programmes in many countries as a form of prevention. Hepatitis B is endemic in a number of (mainly South-East Asian) countries, making cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma big killers.
Hepatitis C (originally "non-A non-B hepatitis") is probably not transmitted sexually but only by blood contact. It leads to a chronic form of hepatitis, culminating in cirrhosis. It can remain asymptomatic for 10-20 years.
Two other hepatitisviruses are known, hepatitis D and E. The D agent, an RNA passenger virus, cannot proliferate without the presence of hepatitis B virus, because its genome lacks certain essential genes. Hepatitis E produces a picture quite similar to hepatitis A, although it can take a fulminant course in some patients, particularly pregnant women; it is more prevalent in the Indian subcontinent.
Another kind of hepatitis, hepatitis G, has also been identified.
Other viruses can cause infectious hepatitis:
Toxic
Toxins and drugs can cause hepatitis:
- Ethanol, mostly in alcoholic beverages, is an important cause of hepatitis. Although in alcoholics it is generally quite mild—taking a chronic course—it can exacerbate after a drinking spree. It is one of main causes of cirrhosis in Western countries, together with hepatitis C.
- The Amanita (death-cap) mushroom (Amanita) contains the poison alpha-amantin. A single mushroom can be enough to be lethal (10 mg).
- Yellow phosphorus (a metal) is an industrial toxin.
- Paracetamol (Acetaminophen in the USA) can cause hepatitis when taken in an overdose. The severity of liver damage can be limited by prompt administration of acetylcysteine.
- Carbon tetrachloride ("tetra", a dry cleaning agent), chloroform and trichloroethylene, all chlorine-containing carbohydrates, cause steatohepatitis (hepatitis with fatty liver).
A large number of drugs can cause hepatitis, including the very commonly used statins. The anti-diabetic drug troglitazone was withdrawn in 2000 for causing hepatitis. Other drugs associated with hepatitis[1]:
- Halothane (anesthetic gas)
- Methyldopa (antihypertensive)
- Isoniazid (INH) and rifampicin (tuberculosis-specific antibiotics)
- Phenytoin and valproic acid (antiepileptics)
- Zidovudine (antiretroviral i.e. against AIDS)
- Ketoconazole (antifungal)
- Nifedipine (antihypertensive)
- Ibuprofen and indomethacin (NSAIDs)
- Amitriptyline (antidepressant)
- Nitrofurantoin (antibiotic)
- Oral contraceptives
- Some herbs and nutritional supplements
Metabolic disorders
Some metabolic disorders cause different forms of hepatitis. Hemochromatosis (due to iron accumulation) and Wilson's disease (copper accumulation) can cause liver inflammation and necrosis.
Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis is closely related to insulin resistance and its related diseases (syndrome X).
Cholestatic
Longstanding obstruction of the bile duct (by gallstones or external obstruction by cancer) leads to destruction and inflammation of liver tissue.
Autoimmune
Anomalous presentation of human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II on the surface of hepatocytes — possibly due to genetic predisposition or acute liver infection — causes a cell-mediated immune response against the body's own liver, resulting in autoimmune hepatitis.
Two forms of primary autoimmune hepatitis are recognised[2]:
- Type 1, 50% of which occurs together with other forms of autoimmune disease (such as thyroiditis and autoimmune anemia)
- Type 2, which affects young girls
Antibodies implicated in autoimmune hepatitis are Antinuclear antibodies (ANA), antibodies against smooth muscle cells (SMA), or liver and kidney microsomes (anti-LKM). The pattern and level of these antibodies help define the type of autoimmune hepatitis (type I or type II). Treatment of autoimmune hepatitis is with prednisolone and/or DMARDs.
In severe cases of alpha 1-antitrypsin deficiency (A1AD), the acculumated protein causes in the endoplasmic reticulum causes liver cell damage and inflammation. This is technically not an autoimmune disease.