Viral hepatitis: a four-year hospital and general-practice study in Sydney. 2. Transmission of viral hepatitis among residential contacts in Sydney.
- 20 February 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Vol. 1 (4) , 174-6
Abstract
Clinical and serological study of household contacts of index patients suffering from acute viral hepatitis showed the high infectivity of hepatitis A viral (HAV) for susceptible contacts. The anti-HAV specific IgM developed in sera of 67% of susceptible children and 31% of susceptible adult contacts. Of 81 susceptible contacts whose sera became anti-HAV positive, 28.4% developed clinically overt hepatitis. Administration of human immunoglobulin reduced the rate of clinical expression of hepatitis A among susceptible contacts; it also appeared to reduce the actual infection rate. The infection rate among susceptible adult contacts of adult index cases suffering from hepatitis B was 24%. Of 25 susceptible contacts whose sera became HBV-marker positive, 24% developed clinical illness. Transmission occurred probably both by parenteral and non-parenteral means. It is currently not possible to determine susceptibility or seroconversion to hepatitis non-A non-B agents.This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: