Diseases Natalie Cole suffers hepatitis C. What you need to know
By Ben Wasserman
Sep 20, 2008 - 2:51:13 PM
If you like the article, could you please do us a favor? Just tell Google News Services that you like foodconsumer.org included in Google News Services. Inclusion in googlenewsservices means many more people can read articles like this. Thanks.
------
Saturday Sep 20, 2008 (foodconsumer.org) -- Grammy
Award-winning singer Natalie Cole has been hospitalized in New York for hepatitis
C, Reuters cited her spokeswoman as saying Friday.
The 58-year old singer has canceled her tour
plan for October, but is expected to fully recover from the illness; the
spokeswoman was cited as telling Reuters.
The following is extracted from NIH Publication No.
04–4229 released May 2004 for those who are interested in learning more about
the disease.
What is hepatitis C?
Hepatitis C is a liver disease that prevents the liver
from working properly.
The liver is very
important organ that fights infections and detoxifies toxic substances
including drugs, other poisons from your blood.
What are the causes for hepatitis C?
Hepatitis C is caused by the hepatitis C virus.
How does hepatitis C spread?
You could get hepatitis C virus from an infected person
by contacting his blood, sharing a needle with him and having sex with
him.
The infectious disease can also
spread from a mother to her child.
In
rare cases, you can get the disease by getting a tattoo or body piercing with unsterilized,
dirty tools.
You cannot get the disease from an infected person by
shaking hands with him, hugging him, kissing him or sitting next to him.
Could I get hepatitis C from a blood transfusion or organ
transplant?
You might have hepatitis C if you had a blood transfusion
or organ transplant before 1992 when doctors could not check the presence of
hepatitis C in the blood and some people got infected with the disease.
What are the symptoms for hepatitis C?
Symptoms may not show up in many people with hepatitis C.
But people with the disease could have symptoms like feeling tired, feeling
sick to the stomach, losing appetite, having stomach pain, diarrhea, dark
yellow urine, light-colored stools, and yellowish eyes and skin.
If you have symptoms or think you might have acquired it,
see a doctor.
How can hepatitis C be tested?
To determine whether you have hepatitis C, doctors need
to do a blood study.
The tests can show
whether you have the disease and how serious it is.
They may also do a liver biopsy.
How is hepatitis C treated?
The disease can be treated with a drug called
peginterferon often along with the drug ribavirin.
If the liver is severely damaged, you may
need surgery and receive a liver transplant.
How can I protect myself from hepatitis C?
The ways to prevent the disease are as follows: do not share
needles, wear gloves to handle someone's blood, wear a condom during sex if you
have multiple sex partners, do not share an infected person's toothbrush,
razor, and anything that could be tainted with the blood, and do not get a
tattoo or body piercing if the tools are dirty.