Occult Hepatitis B Infection: A Diagnosis to Have in Mind in Hemodialysis Patients
Andreia C Carnevale, Rita Birne, Ana Rita Martins, Jorge Dickson, Maria H Boquinhas

TL;DR
This paper discusses the challenges of diagnosing occult hepatitis B in hemodialysis patients, highlighting the importance of careful monitoring and HBV DNA testing for accurate detection.
Contribution
The paper presents a case study illustrating the difficulty of diagnosing occult HBV in hemodialysis patients and emphasizes the need for a high index of suspicion.
Findings
Occult HBV infection can be difficult to diagnose due to low HBV DNA levels and inconsistent serological markers.
A high index of suspicion and HBV DNA testing are crucial for diagnosing occult HBV in hemodialysis patients.
Early detection of occult HBV is important for managing the risk of reactivation and proper differential diagnosis.
Abstract
Hepatitis B infection (HBV) is a global health problem, with several distinct manifestations and risk of progression to cirrhosis or hepatocellular carcinoma. Patients with chronic kidney disease on hemodialysis are particularly vulnerable to infection due to the risk of disease transmission related to vascular access use, passage of blood through the extracorporeal circuit, shared dialysis equipment, and occasional transfusion of blood products. The clinical consequences, lack of therapy capable of complete eradication of HBV, and the fact that it is the viral disease most frequently transmitted via the parenteral route in this population make its timely diagnosis important. Frequent screening of HBV infection is recommended, and serological tests are usually sufficient for diagnosis of the disease. However, occult HBV infection is a clinical entity that can be difficult to diagnose.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHepatitis B Virus Studies · Hepatitis Viruses Studies and Epidemiology · Hepatitis C virus research
