Can U Get Hep C from reusing your own needle?

Can U Get Hep C from reusing your own needle?

People who inject drugs can get Hepatitis C from: Needles & Syringes. Sharing or reusing needles and syringes increases the chance of spreading the Hepatitis C virus. Syringes with detachable needles increase this risk even more because they can retain more blood after they are used than syringes with fixed-needles.

How do you get hep C from needles?

The hepatitis C virus is transmitted via blood and other bodily fluids, and one of the most common ways it’s contracted is from sharing a needle used to inject an intoxicant with someone who is already carrying the virus. Having sex with an infected individual can also spread the disease.

What’s the worst hepatitis AB or C?

Chronic hepatitis C has become a curable disease. Chronic hepatitis B is manageable, but not yet curable. This means that hepatitis B, which was already a worse disease than hepatitis C before the new therapies for HCV, is now a much more important unsolved health problem.

How long is hep C contagious?

When and for how long is a person able to spread hepatitis C? Persons with acute hepatitis C virus infection are generally contagious from one or more weeks before the onset of symptoms. The contagious period is indefinite in chronically infected persons.

Can you get hep C from period blood?

Transmission during menstruation Hepatitis C is a blood-borne virus, so is present in a woman’s menstrual blood if she is living with the virus. This is one of the few situations which sexual transmission of hepatitis C is possible between heterosexual couples.

How long does it take Hep C to damage liver?

On average it takes about twenty years for significant liver scarring to develop. The symptoms experienced and the damage done to the liver vary dramatically from person to person. Some people will have few, if any, symptoms for many years.

How long does it take Hep C to turn into cirrhosis?

From those who develop a chronic or long term infection (between 70-80% of those infected with hepatitis C) around 20-30% will develop cirrhosis within 20 years. For some it may be quicker while for others it may take up to sixty years, meaning they will probably die of unrelated causes first.

Does Hep C shorten your life?

Outlook. The prognosis of chronic HCV is typically very good, and as treatment continues to improve, it will only get better. Most people with chronic HCV can live a normal life, providing that doctors are able to diagnose it before any liver damage or other complications occur.

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