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Impact of Hepatitis on Recovery
Based in Part on SAMHSA TIP 53
Dr. Dawn-Elise Snipes
AllCEUs Counselor Education

Objectives
~ Learn about hepatitis and its prevalence
~ Identify the consequences of hepatitis
~ Explore the impact of hepatitis on mental health and effective interventions

Intro
~ Hepatitis refers to an inflammatory condition of the liver caused by a viral infection, autoimmune hepatitis or as a secondary result of drugs, toxins, or alcohol.

What does the liver do
~ Filtering of toxins from your body
~ Filtering and excretion of toxins
~ Ammonium is produced when proteins break down, some of which is used by the brain to make glutamine– the rest is filtered by the liver. If the liver malfunctions, it causes an excess amount of ammonium, and therefore glutamine production in the brain which can trigger inflammation called hepatic encephalopathy
~ Breakdown of carbohydrates, fats, and proteins
~ Activation of enzymes essential to body functions
~ Storage of glycogen, minerals, and vitamins (A, D, E, and K)
~ Synthesis of blood proteins, such as albumin which serves as an antioxidant eliminating free radicals that contribute to depression
~ Synthesis of clotting factors

Types of Hepatitis
~ Hepatitis A usually last less than 2 months, although 10%–15% of symptomatic persons have prolonged or relapsing disease for up to 6 months, but does not become a chronic, long-term, infection
~ Hepatitis B: about 90% of infants with hepatitis B go on to develop chronic infection, whereas only 2%–6% of people who get hepatitis B as adults become chronically infected and have increased risk of liver cancer (preventable with vaccination).
~ Once diagnosed, most people with hepatitis C can be cured in just 8 to 12 weeks, reducing liver cancer risk by 75%.
~ Hepatitis D can only be contracted by someone with Hep B
~ Hepatitis E is spread through ingestion of feces from infected people and most people have a full recovery.
~ Autoimmune Hepatitis
~ Alcoholic Hepatitis

Side Effects of Hepatitis
~ Activation of proinflammatory cytokines may directly lead to the development of depression via direct CNS effects including fatigue, anhedonia, social isolation, psychomotor slowing, decreased appetite and libido, hyperalgesia, sleep disturbance, and neurocognitive impairment
~ Major depression in nearly 25% of untreated HCV patients
~ HCV infection may result in cognitive impairment prior to development of cirrhosis, and may be unrelated to a history of illicit drug use or mood disorder in some patients
~ Sleep disturbances affect about 50 percent of people with hepatitis C an can worsen other behavioral health symptoms

Mental Health Issues and Hepatitis Tx
~ Hepatitis medications (interfeuron-alpha) may cause depression, delirium, irritability, mania
~ IFN-α activates CNS opioid receptors
~ IFN-α may damage neurons by causing cerebral edema, increases in free radicals, and the promotion of glutamate release causing excitotoxic cell death
~ Baseline depression and/or anxiety, even when subclinical, predicts the development of psychiatric morbidity during IFN-α treatment
~ IFN-α induces the enzyme indole-amine 2, 3-dioxegenase (IDO), which causes a diversion of the metabolism of tryptophan away from serotonin
~ Hepatitis medications (interfeuron-alpha) may cause depression, delirium, irritability, mania
~ Irritability is a classic symptom of mania and a common adverse effect of IFN-α with 20% of patients demonstrating manic or hypomanic symptoms at some time point during six months of treatment
~ Up to 77% of patients receiving IFN-α plus ribavirin for HCV report fatigue during treatment

Treatments
~ Antidepressants, particularly SSRIs have shown significant effectiveness in treating depressive symptoms in both treatment-related and non-treatment related depression
~ Health Education to help clients understand the diagnosis, prognosis and treatment plan
~ Dietary support
~ Build support systems
~ Develop a plan to prevent infecting others and further liver damage
~ Motivational Enhancement and practical management of side effects
~ Fatigue
~ Irritability
~ Isolation
~ Sleep impairment
~ Hyperalgesia
~ Loss of appetite
~ Recognition of the time-limited nature of treatment
~ Reframing symptoms as the body doing its job
~ PAWS in people who were abusing substances

Summary
~ The liver is involved in managing blood sugar, production of antioxidants to reduce inflammation, filtering out toxins that can contribute to inflammation and creation of neurotransmitters
~ Interfeuron-alpha treatment as well as hepatitis itself can contribute to anxiety, irritability, mania, depression, grief
~ Many clients benefit from a combination of health education, motivational enhancement, development of a risk reduction plan and cognitive restructuring.