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Prev Med 1998 May;27(3):461-469
Consumption of alcohol in the presence of Hepatitis C virus is an additive
risk for liver damage.
Ohta S, Watanabe Y, Nakajima T
Department of Public Health, Shinshu University School of Medicine,
Matsumoto, Japan.
BACKGROUND:
Whether alcohol consumption influences the development of Hepatitis C in the
presence of a latent infection needs to be determined.
METHODS:
The interaction between alcohol intake and Hepatitis C virus infection with
regard to development of liver injury was cross-sectionally investigated for
399 inhabitants of a town in Nagano Prefecture, Japan. In this town, the prevalence
of Hepatitis C virus infection is 32.4%.
RESULTS:
The levels of indicators of liver function were significantly higher among
subjects of both sexes who carried the antibody to Hepatitis C virus than among
those without the antibody. Among men, higher levels of liver function were
more frequent among alcohol drinkers than among nondrinkers, suggesting that
alcohol consumption may aid in the development of liver injury, even among subjects
with a latent Hepatitis C virus infection. gamma-Glutamyl transpeptidase activity
was more sharply increased in relation to alcohol intake among subjects with
Hepatitis C virus infection than among those without it, suggesting that the
presence of infection will influence alcohol-induced liver damage.
CONCLUSION:
Alcohol consumption and a concomitant Hepatitis C virus infection apparently
facilitate the development of hepatitis.
PMID: 9612837, UI: 98275784
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