According to the Center for Disease Control and Prevention 80%
of people with Hep C do not have or show symptoms.The inception of symptoms can
come at a stage where different types of ailments are noticeable. The symptoms
include Fever, Dark Urine, Loss of Appetite, Abdominal pain or discomfort,
Joint Pains, and Jaundice. Most people go on to have acute Hep C meaning the
virus is there in the body for a period of 6 months or longer, it is common to
have the infection for 15 years or longer before being diagnosed.Hep
C is also an invisible disease. How does one know whether an individual has hep
c or not, in the early stages it is very hard to tell while many do not show
symptoms. The inflammation of liver due to the virus can be very serious. Hep c
in fact is considered as the most serious of all the hepatitis viruses.
There are more warning signs of the Hep C virus that include nausea or
vomiting, pain in your
stomach, muscle pain, abnormalities in urine or bowel movements, and yellowing
in your eyes or skin. After exposure to the Hep C virus the symptoms could
start anywhere between six or seven weeks.
According
to Rupert George, media and campaigns manager at The Hepatitis C Trust,
the most common symptom of the virus is feeling unexplainably tired.
Other symptoms can also include pains in the upper part of the
abdomen, dry eyes, irritable bowel and irritable bladder.
But George stresses that the vast majority of people with hepatitis C do not
have any noticeable symptoms, which is why it’s often referred to as a “silent
disease”.
Because of this, he believes it’s more important to know the risk factors for
catching the virus so people can think about any times they may have been
infected.
“The most common way is injecting and drug use, but people who are in contact
with drugs services are much more likely to be tested for hepatitis C than any
other group of people, so they’re also most likely to know that they have it,”
he tells The Huffington Post UK.People
who use steroids and other image or performance enhancing drugs are thought to
have levels of hepatitis C nine times higher than the general population.
But people living with the virus unknowingly may have contracted the disease
through other forms of needle-use.
“I’m aware of someone who contracted it through a botox injection,” he says.
“You can get it from a tattoo, you can get it through piercing, you can get it
through anything where your skin is being punctured and there’s the potential
for blood-to-blood contact.”
George says getting a tattoo or receiving medical treatment aboard, where
regulations are sometimes less strict, is particularly risky.
“If you go and have a tattoo make sure the tattoo artist uses fresh ink and
fresh needles,” he says.
“It’s a very robust virus. Even if the artist uses a fresh needle, but then
dips the needle in the ink they’ve used to tattoo the previous customer,
there’s the potential for somebody to become infected through the ink.”Although
the risk of hepatitis C being transmitted via sex is fairly low, there is the
potential for it to be passed between partners.
In this instance, vaginal sex during menstruation or anal sex with the
associated risk of bleeding carry the highest risk of infection.
For this reason, men who have sex with men are considered particularly at risk.
“There’s also the chance to contract it with people who use tubs of lube during
sex,” George adds.
“If you’re using the same lube, that can be something the virus can stay in and
it can stay there long enough for someone to become infected via that route.”
Finally, anyone who received a blood transfusion before 1991 may be living with
the virus without knowing it, as before this time there wasn’t a test available
for it.
“There are women with hepatitis C who contracted it due to a blood transfusion
during childbirth,” George explains.
If any of these risk factors apply to you or you’re just concerned about
hepatitis C in general, you can ask your GP for a simple blood test that will
reveal if you’ve been infected. There’s
no need to panic if you come back with a positive result as in the vast
majority of cases, hepatitis C can now be cured.
“Up until about three years ago there was only one treatment available which really wasn’t very nice. It was quite akin to chemotherapy and it didn’t work for quite a lot of people particularly well. It was very long - about 48 weeks,” George explains. “But now there are these new fantastic treatments that can work as quickly as eight weeks and cure 90% of people.”
“Up until about three years ago there was only one treatment available which really wasn’t very nice. It was quite akin to chemotherapy and it didn’t work for quite a lot of people particularly well. It was very long - about 48 weeks,” George explains. “But now there are these new fantastic treatments that can work as quickly as eight weeks and cure 90% of people.”
Most people who receive treatment will receive a combination of two or three
medications to fight the virus – known as combination therapy.
“It’s in your interested to get tested,” George says. “There is a cure and you
can get it sorted for yourself.”Huff
Post Blogger Toni Feldstein was diagnosed with hepatitis C in 1985 and says
she’s aware of stigma attached to the illness because of the misconception that
it’s a “dirty disease”.
But she wants people who have been diagnosed to feel confident in talking about
the virus in order to raise awareness.
“Don’t be afraid to say it out loud. People will respect your honesty and
openness and you will feel more empowered by standing in your truth and
integrity. Don’t let it limit you as a human being,” she says.
“Embarrassment, shame and guilt only lead to low self-esteem. There is no shame in having your disease or living with it. If some people have a negative reaction to it, it is their issue, not yours.”For more information about hepatitis C, visit www.soulofhealing.org or leave us a message and we will get back to you.
Disclaimer: Soul of Healing is a Nonprofit based in the
US, its subsidiary Sunny Pharma in Bangalore provides generic alternatives for Hep C treatment.
For more information you can visit sunnypharma.org or contactus.
“Embarrassment, shame and guilt only lead to low self-esteem. There is no shame in having your disease or living with it. If some people have a negative reaction to it, it is their issue, not yours.”For more information about hepatitis C, visit www.soulofhealing.org or leave us a message and we will get back to you.
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