"WE SUPPORT BECAUSE WE UNDERSTAND"
Hepatitis
& HIV
There's
little doubting the tremendous impact anti-HIV drug therapy has
had on the lives, and futures, of HIV-positive people. Rates of
opportunistic infections are still low in the United States and
it's abundantly clear that people are living longer with HIV infection
thanks to the availability and widespread use of these
treatments.
Unfortunately,
the life-extending benefits of anti-HIV drug treatment have opened
up a new set of problems for many HIV-positive people. Thousands
of HIV-positive people in the U.S. are also infected or
at risk of being infected with one of several hepatitis
viruses. Some of the hepatitis viruses can cause chronic infection,
meaning that they remain active for many years and can lead to
serious liver damage over time. And because many HIV-positive
people are now at a much lower risk of dying from an AIDS-related
opportunistic infections, they must now face the challenge of
having to manage these other viral diseases that pose a threat
to their health and lives.
Viral hepatitis, which can cause long-term liver problems, liver
failure, and liver cancer, is considered to be a leading cause
of death among HIV-positive people. In turn, numerous HIV-positive
people must fight two infections at once. AIDSmeds.com has prepared
some lessons to help its readers better understand three hepatitis
viruses that are a potential threat to their health: hepatitis
A virus (HAV), hepatitis B virus (HBV), and hepatitis C virus
(HCV). Each of the following lessons discuss the ways these hepatitis
viruses are transmitted, cause disease, and are treated, particularly
in people living with HIV:
Hepatitis
A
Hepatitis B
Hepatitis C

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