It is highly unlikely that Hepatitis B would be contracted through sitting on a toilet seat. You would need to have an open cut and the cut come in contact with the infected blood or body fluids.
if the person is a carrier of hepatitis virus, one can be infected with eating feces of this person. but the person is not a carrier than it can not be possible.
Of course, and so can many other diseases that is why its important to not come in contact with it and wash after using the restroom etc.
From fecal matter alone no. If the fecal matter has blood in it then yes.
Nah you're all good, go for your life.
Yes
The type of germs that live on a toilet seat include Streptococcus, E.Coli, Staphylococcus, Hepatitis A, salmonella. These are just a few examples, it has not been proved that these issues are contracted just from the seat.
The causative agent for Hepatitis B is Hepatitis B virus.
form_title= Toilet Seat form_header= Sit comfortably with a new toilet seat. What color do you want the toilet seat?*= _ [50] Do you want the toilet seat cushioned?*= () Yes () No Do you need to remove an old toilet seat?*= () Yes () No
There is no harm or benefit from giving hepatitis B vaccine to someone with hepatitis B.
Hepatitis is actually quite a general term which means inflammation of the liver and so has many causes for example drug-induced, alcoholic, autoimmune or infectious. On the whole when most people refer to hepatitis they refer to infectious hepatitis often caused by the hepatitis viruses types B & C which have the potential to cause long term (chronic) hepatitis. There are other forms of the hepatitis virus family including types A, D & E and there are other forms of virus which can cause hepatitis. There are non-viral infectious causes of hepatitis including toxoplasma and Q fever (which is a bacteria) but these are rare.
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.
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
a toilet seat