Usually Signs of Hepatitis A Symptoms
The Hepatitis A symptoms and signs usually appear from 15 to 50 days (2 to 7 weeks) after exposure to hepatitis A virus (HAV), and the average time HAV symptoms appears is 4 weeks. The hepatitis A symptoms and signs are usually mild and can not be observed in children under 6 years. Among older children and adults, early symptoms are similar to those of a stomach virus.
Possible hepatitis A symptoms and signs include:
- Extreme fatigue (tiredness).
- Fever.
- Sore muscles.
- Headaches.
- Pain in the right side of the abdomen below the ribs (when the liver is located).
- Nausea.
- Loss of appetite and weight loss.
- Yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes (jaundice), sometimes accompanied by dark urine and clay-colored (whitish) stools. Jaundice is less common in children and young adults.
About 15% of people with signs of hepatitis A have symptoms of infection with HAV that performance or the last 6 to 9 months after the first infection occurred.1 The infection of hepatitis A is usually more severe than the first time, but the Arthritis can occur with it. After the infection goes away, the person usually returns to normal health. Rarely, cholestatic hepatitis occurs, which can cause itching and can last throughout the infection.
In general, when signs of hepatitis A symptoms occur, the amount of virus is shed in the feces is in decline. You can still spread the virus, but is less likely to do so after symptoms appear. The symptoms of hepatitis A signs usually last less than 2 months. In other countries, hepatitis A also called as l’hépatite A, la hepatitis A, epatite A, WZW typu A, hepatitt A.
