Hepatitis A
What is Hepatitis A?
Hepatitis A is an acute, self-limited viral infection of the liver caused by the Hepatitis A virus (HAV).
Unlike Hepatitis B or C:
- ❌ No chronic infection
- ❌ No carrier state
- ❌ No cirrhosis from chronicity
- ❌ No hepatocellular carcinoma
But it can cause fulminant hepatic failure, especially in adults.
Single serotype = lifelong immunity after infection or vaccination
Epidemiology
Global Pattern
|
Region |
Pattern |
|
Low-income countries |
Early childhood infection (often asymptomatic) |
|
Developed countries |
Adult outbreaks |
|
India |
Historically high endemicity, now shifting to intermediate |
Transmission
- Feco-oral route
- Contaminated water
- Poor sanitation
- Food handlers
- Raw shellfish
- Day-care centers
- MSM outbreaks
- Travelers
Pathogenesis
1️⃣ Ingestion → replication in oropharynx & gut
2️⃣ Viremia
3️⃣ Reaches liver via portal circulation
4️⃣ Replication inside hepatocytes
5️⃣ Immune-mediated cytotoxic T-cell injury
6️⃣ Virus excreted in bile → stool
Liver injury is immune mediated, not directly cytopathic.
Incubation Period
- 15–50 days
- Average: 28 days
Clinical Presentation
1️⃣ Asymptomatic Phase (common in children)
<6 years: >70% asymptomatic
2️⃣ Symptomatic Acute Hepatitis (Adults)
🔹 Prodromal (Pre-icteric) Phase
- Fever
- Malaise
- Nausea
- Vomiting
- Anorexia
- Myalgia
- RUQ discomfort
Duration: 3–7 days
🔹 Icteric Phase
- Jaundice
- Dark urine
- Pale stool
- Hepatomegaly
- Pruritus (mild)
- Fatigue
3️⃣ Convalescent Phase
- Gradual recovery
- Fatigue may persist for weeks
Complications
|
Complication |
Frequency |
|
Prolonged cholestasis |
5% |
|
Relapsing hepatitis |
10% |
|
Acute liver failure |
<1% |
|
Fulminant hepatic failure |
Rare but serious |
Risk factors for severe disease:
- Age >50
- Chronic liver disease
- Alcohol use
- Immunocompromised
Acute Liver Failure Due to HAV
Features:
- INR >1.5
- Encephalopathy
- Jaundice
Higher mortality in:
- Elderly
- Underlying liver disease
Laboratory Findings
LFT Pattern
|
Parameter |
Finding |
|
AST/ALT |
Markedly elevated (1000–3000 IU/L) |
|
ALT > AST |
Typical |
|
Bilirubin |
Elevated |
|
ALP |
Mildly elevated |
|
INR |
Normal unless severe |
Specific Diagnosis
|
Test |
Interpretation |
|
Anti-HAV IgM |
Acute infection |
|
Anti-HAV IgG |
Past infection or immunity |
|
HAV RNA PCR |
Rarely needed |
IgM detectable at symptom onset → disappears in 3–6 months
Differential Diagnosis
- Hepatitis B
- Hepatitis E
- Drug-induced liver injury
- Autoimmune hepatitis
- Ischemic hepatitis
- Obstructive jaundice
Management
No Specific Antiviral Therapy
Treatment is supportive
General Measures
- Rest
- Hydration
- Avoid alcohol
- Avoid hepatotoxic drugs (e.g., paracetamol overdose)
Hospitalization Indications
- Severe vomiting
- INR rising
- Encephalopathy
- Severe dehydration
- Acute liver failure
Prevention
1️⃣ Vaccination
- Inactivated HAV vaccine
- 2 doses (0 and 6 months)
- 95% seroconversion
- Lifelong immunity
Available vaccines:
- Havrix
- Vaqta
2️⃣ Post-Exposure Prophylaxis (PEP)
|
Age |
Recommendation |
|
<40 years |
Vaccine within 14 days |
|
>40 years |
Vaccine ± Immunoglobulin |
|
Immunocompromised |
Vaccine + IG |
|
Chronic liver disease |
Vaccine + IG |
3️⃣ Sanitation
- Safe water
- Hand hygiene
- Food safety
- Avoid raw shellfish
Comparison: Hepatitis A vs Hepatitis E
|
Feature |
HAV |
HEV |
|
Chronicity |
No |
Rare |
|
Pregnancy risk |
Low |
High mortality |
|
Vaccine |
Yes |
Limited availability |
|
Transmission |
Feco-oral |
Feco-oral |

