NewsRx Logo Login/Signup
Home Newsletters Products Library About Us Contact -- Search NewsRx

NewsRx | Free Trials
Advertisement
VerticalNews | Global Warming
Advertisement
NewsRx | Free Trials
Advertisement
----------
------------
NewsRx on Facebook
-----
Press Release Submissions
PR Login
*
*

Biotech Week

Welcome to NewsRx!

Learn more about a six-week, no-risk free trial of Biotech Week

Learn More

We're a pay-per-view site for premium content. If you'd like to purchase this article, it's only $3.00.

Buy Now



Hepatitis A Virus



Researchers find hepatitis A and hepatitis C attack same protein to block immune defenses



May 2nd, 2007

Despite the fact that they both infect the liver, the hepatitis A and hepatitis C viruses actually have very little in common. The two are far apart genetically, are transmitted differently, and produce very different diseases. Hepatitis A spreads through the consumption of fecal particles from an infected person (in pollution-contaminated food or water, for example), but hepatitis C is generally transmitted only by direct contact with infected blood.

Hepatitis A produces fever, nausea and abdominal pain that can last for weeks, but rarely lead to death; hepatitis C, by contrast, often spends decades quietly damaging the liver, until a victim’s only hope for survival is...


Source: Biotech Week (2007-05-02)

NewsRx Passes
Advertisement
More Articles

Related Topics

------------------------
Security by Verisign PR Login