Hepatitis B
What Happens
Most people who have hepatitis B have an acute (short-term) infection.
- They start to feel better after 2 to 3 weeks and recover completely after 4 to 8 weeks. They develop Reference antibodies Opens New Window to hepatitis B. These antibodies provide lifelong protection against future infection.
- Only some people (mainly older adults) have long-lasting symptoms.
- A small number of people have symptoms that last for months and sometimes years.
If you stay infected with the virus for 6 months or longer, you have a chronic infection.
The risk of having chronic infection is related to the age at which you first become infected. The risk is highest for newborns infected at birth and children up to age 5.
Many people who have chronic hepatitis B won't develop complications. But about 15 to 25 out of 100 people who have chronic infection will die of Reference cirrhosis Opens New Window or Reference liver cancer.Reference 1 (This means that 75 to 85 people out of 100 who have a chronic infection won't die of these diseases.) Having a lot of virus in the body (a high viral load) increases the risk of getting cirrhosis and liver cancer.
- You are more likely to get cirrhosis if you carry a certain hepatitis B Reference antigen Opens New Window, are older than 40, and have high liver enzymes. For more information, see the topic Reference Cirrhosis.
- Risk factors for getting liver cancer after chronic infection include being male, having a family history of liver cancer, being over 40 years old, having cirrhosis, and also having Reference hepatitis C Opens New Window.
Reference Hepatitis D (delta) virus infection is a problem that can develop in relation to hepatitis B infection, but it's not common. It occurs only in those with hepatitis B. And it may make that infection more severe.
People who have hepatitis B who engage in high-risk behavior (such as having multiple sex partners or injecting illegal drugs) are at increased risk for hepatitis C. They also are at higher risk of getting Reference HIV Opens New Window, the virus that causes Reference AIDS Opens New Window.
| By: | Reference Healthwise Staff | Last Revised: Reference October 29, 2012 |
| Medical Review: | Reference Kathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine
Reference W. Thomas London, MD - Hepatology |
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