Hepatitis A, B or C?
Hepatitis B is not a bacterial disease, its a viral diseas..
Hepatitis A or B or C involves an infection of the liver caused by a virus.
The target organ of hepatitis B virus (HBV) is the liver.
If anti-Hbs is reactive, the patient is immune to hepatitis B.
Hepatitis B spreads primarily through sexual intercourse.
The causative agent for Hepatitis B is Hepatitis B virus.
No. Hepatitis C is spread via blood-to-blood contact. So unless both persons have bleeding hands, the answer is no.
There is no harm or benefit from giving hepatitis B vaccine to someone with hepatitis B.
HIV is the most infectious between the following blood borne pathogens; HIV, hepatitis b, hepatitis c.
Hepatitis is inflammation in the liver caused by the virus hepatitis B.
The hepatitis B illness is caused by the hepatitis B virus, a species of the genus Orthohepadnavirus.
Hepatitis B is a viral infection. It is a virus. Only one virus causes Hepatitis B. It infects the liver. A vaccine exists to prevent it. It is blood borne. If you are in the same room with someone who has it, you will not catch it. Do not share needles, razors, or anything that could move their body fluids to you. Hepatitis B can be treated. Other liver infections exist. Hepatitis A generally results when an infected person prepares your food. Hepatitis C is blood borne. Anything one person does that gets body fluids from one person into another spreads the virus. Hepatitis D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, and M also exist. Those liver infections are caused by different pathogens. (I do not have the first idea about any of those diseases. Someone came back from Atlanta and passed on that information.)
There's a Hepatitis B vaccine that can prevent it.
Usually caused by hepatitis B virus.
Since Hepatitis B vaccine only protects against Hepatitis B, the only thing the vaccine controls is Hepatitis B infections.
Hepatitis B, hepatitis C and AIDS