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Acute Hepatitis B Virus Infection: Relation of Age to the Clinical Expression of Disease and Subsequent Development of the Carrier State
830
Citations
13
References
1985
Year
Southwestern AlaskaImmunodeficienciesImmunologyHepatitis BUnited StatesHepatic DisordersViral PersistenceViral HepatitisCarrier StateClinical EpidemiologyPublic HealthClinical HepatologyInfectious Disease PreventionClinical ExpressionVirologySubsequent DevelopmentChronic Viral InfectionEpidemiologyVaccinationHepatitis DHepatologyYupik EskimosHepatitisAcute Liver FailureLiver DiseaseMedicine
Yupik Eskimos of southwestern Alaska have the highest known prevalence of hepatitis B virus infection of any general population in the United States. Prospective serological surveys of 1,280 seronegative Yupik Eskimos, performed between 1971 and 1976, identified 189 (14.8%) who developed serological evidence of hepatitis B virus infection. Twenty-six (13.8%) developed clinical hepatitis during the interval when seroconversion occurred. The proportion of patients with clinically apparent hepatitis increased with age (P less than .01), ranging from 9.5% of infections in patients who were four years of age or less to 33.3% of infections in patients who were 30 years of age or older. Twenty-five (13.3%) of the 188 individuals who were studied became chronic carriers of hepatitis B surface antigen. The risk of becoming a carrier was inversely related to the age of the patient at the time of infection (P = .02). Among patients who were four years of age or less when infected, 28.8% became chronic carriers of hepatitis B, as compared with 7.7% of those who were 30 years of age or older.
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