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Do You
Think It's Related?
Doctors
are discovering what many hepatitis patients have known all
along: Not all symptoms of hepatitis C come from your liver.
By:
Liz Webb
"I’ve had
pain in my legs, arms, hands and just about everywhere. ... I
was diagnosed two months ago with fibromyalgia and myofascial
pain syndrome. …My liver enzymes are normal. ... Do you think
all these problems could be caused by the hepatitis? Does that
mean that it is mimicking fibromyalgia or has it caused it to
occur? Is it possible to have all these symptoms and yet have
fairly normal liver enzymes?”
Thanks, B.
Over the
past six years, similar questions have been posed to me by
hepatitis C patients thousands of times. Too often, their
doctors tell them their symptoms and other medical conditions
are not related to hepatitis C, which causes frustration and
confusion for patients. The fact that so many patients report
similar symptoms and that a multitude of research has shown a
remarkable number of Hepatitis C Virus patients with other
conditions, makes it clear that there is more to the relation
between these conditions than just coincidence.
In her
book Hepatitis C - A Personal Guide To Good Health,
Beth Ann Petro Roybal writes, “Certain symptoms, such as itchy
skin and jaundice, are directly caused by liver damage brought
on by Hepatitis C Virus. ... Symptoms such as chronic fatigue
may not be caused by liver damage per se, but may be a result of
Hepatitis C Virus’s assault on the immune system. ... Some
people with hepatitis C also develop other conditions as a
result of their damaged immune system. Some of these conditions
include mixed cryoglobulinemia, rheumatoid arthritis, lichen
planus and glomerulonephritis (kidney disease).”
Matthew
Dolan, citing several studies in his book The Hepatitis C
Handbook, backs up this claim. Dolan points to a study by
Christian Stassburg and Michael Manns in Viral Hepatitis
Review that noted: “Chronic hepatitis C infection has been
found to be associated with an array of autoimmune disease
including … autoimmune thyroid disease, autoimmune hepatitis,
porphyria cutanea tarda, Sj?gren’s syndrome, etc. This means
that immune stimulants such as interferon may cause more
problems in patients with autoimmune symptoms.”
With the
many studies and papers associating autoimmune diseases in
patients with Hepatitis C Virus, why has it been so difficult to
be diagnosed and treated for such illnesses? Dolan writes,
“Patients will find that they are experiencing symptoms that
specialists would not normally expect given a particular set of
liver function test results. ... Patients who present without
clear signs of liver disease and with low or undetectable virus
can experience (diagnostic and treatment) problems; doctors may
often be unwilling to accept that such patients are experiencing
debilitating symptoms.”
With
hepatitis C’s reputation of being only a liver disease, these
overlapping autoimmune conditions may complicate the potential
treatments of Hepatitis C Virus, Strassburg and Manns noted, and
cause confusion for the patient as well as their doctor.
The Lymphatic Connection
The
lymphatic system — a major component of our overall immune
system — is key in aiding our
bodies to fight off viruses and infections. A
subsystem of the circulatory system
consisting of a complex network of vessels, tissues and organs,
the lymphatic system helps defend the body against infection by
supplying disease-fighting cells — called lymphocytes. The
lymphatic system also helps maintain fluid balance in the body
by collecting excess fluid and particulate matter from tissues
and depositing them in the bloodstream. So how does the
lymphatic system get itself involved with a virus that affects
the liver?
Dolan
points to several studies that indicate Hepatitis C Virus lives
and replicates within the lymphatic system as well as the liver
causing immune system malfunction. Dolan details how the virus
is able to mutate and avoid the immune system’s attack.
Additionally, he describes how the virus can trick the immune
system into attacking the body’s own tissues. This understanding
of Hepatitis C Virus as a systemic disease — a disease that
affects several bodily systems at once — may explain why some
people with high viral loads have little damage or inflammation
in the liver, yet they experience severe symptoms very similar
to the flu.
“Some
people with chronic Hepatitis C Virus experience a range of
symptoms usually classified as autoimmune,” Dolan states. “This
occurrence may owe at least as much to the presence of Hepatitis
C Virus in the lymphatic system as to the liver.” Due to the
autoimmune-related nature of these conditions, they may not be
seen in other forms of hepatitis, which makes it difficult for
liver specialists to recognize them let alone relate them to
hepatitis C.
Until
recently, hepatitis C has been perceived by the medical
community to be a localized infection of the liver. Researchers
have found that hepatitis C is not just a liver disease but a
disease that affects many bodily systems at once, causing the
immune system to malfunction and lose the ability to
differentiate between Hepatitis C Virus particles and human
cells.
This
overlapping nature of hepatitis C as a liver and immune system
disease, notes Dr. Parveen Kumar and Dr. Michael Clark, editors
of Clinical Medicine, can lead to an autoimmune
disease. “An autoimmune disease occurs when the immune system
fails to recognize the body’s own tissues as self and mounts an
attack on them. Illnesses are divided into those that affect
just one organ (organ-specific) and those that affect many
systems (systemic).”
The Diagnosis and Treatment Challenge
“For
the last five or six months, I’ve woken up every morning with
extreme pain in my back. I think it’s in the kidney area, just
below my ribs. I also have chronic joint pain, constant fatigue;
I have had blood tests and a biopsy but nothing has ever been
explained ...”
Hepatitis C Virus Patient
Many
Hepatitis C Virus patients describe how their lives have become
a vicious cycle as they try to get recognition and treatment for
their various symptoms and conditions that are not specific to
liver disease. Their autoimmune-related symptoms are difficult
to diagnose as often their lab tests are below diagnostic levels
or they do not fully develop all of the clinical diagnostic
symptoms linked to a particular disease.
Dr. Ben
Cecil, a hepatologist experienced with Hepatitis C Virus
patients who present with overlapping autoimmune diseases
confirms the findings: “I have several patients with
cryoglobulinemia and one with renal failure and malignant
hypertension. Many of my patients have pains in their muscles
and joints which are probably related to Hepatitis C Virus.”
Cecil said
he recognizes the potential contradictions of lab results and
symptoms, and comments that the low titers of antinuclear
antibody and other autoimmune disease markers are nonspecific.
He suggests that your doctor should consult with a
rheumatologist if there is suspicion of overlapping disease
processes. He also suggests potential autoimmune tests such as
the rheumatoid factor for rheumatoid arthritis, cryoglobulins
for cryoglobulinemia as well as the erythrocyte sedimentation
rate for evidence of general inflammation. Depending on your
symptoms and your doctor’s advice, additional tests to detect
kidney disease, thyroid dysfunction and diabetes may also be
required.
Take Charge of Your Care
For the past
two years, I have been in pain, almost flu like in nature, achy
bones, etc. This past spring the pain became very intense, and I
developed swollen feet and ankles on both legs. Blood tests show
no sign of autoimmune disease, and my liver counts were fine.
The liver doctor has written me off saying my symptoms have no
connection to the hep C. I am becoming very frustrated!
Hepatitis C Virus Patient
With
stories like these coming to me nearly every day, it is clear
that diagnostic medicine, which considers hepatitis C to be only
a liver disease and relies wholly on laboratory measures, is
failing to help hepatitis C patients who suffer from Hepatitis C
Virus-related, autoimmune disorders. It is important to keep in
mind that intuition and interpretation on the part of the
physician is of utmost importance, and the possible existence of
autoimmune diseases should not be ruled out simply because the
early lab reports are negative for diagnostic markers.
The
American Liver Foundation has stated, “First, we need to
intensify efforts to educate primary care physicians and
patients. Physicians must be armed with state-of-the-art
information about diagnostic testing and optimal care.
Physicians and patients must be empowered to make informed
decisions about treatment.”
Doctors
and patients may benefit from standard evaluation guidelines
which list tests for related conditions and how to interpret
them, since as mentioned, many of these conditions do not always
fit the known diagnostic criteria. Such an approach could
provide the doctor with an opportunity to design a carefully
planned treatment protocol that could then help to protect the
patient from having the underlying conditions worsen.
If you
feel you are suffering from possible Hepatitis C Virus-related
autoimmune diseases, the best thing you can do is to find a
doctor who is aware of the connections with Hepatitis C Virus,
one who is willing to listen to you, and provide you with
appropriate treatment and symptomatic relief. If you find
yourself being dismissed, look for another doctor and keep
looking until you find the one right for you.
Common Co-Ailments with Hepatitis C
Here are
some common conditions linked to hepatitis C according to
The Hepatitis C Handbook, Hepatitis C - A Personal Guide to Good
Health and www.askemilyss.com:
-
Rheumatoid Arthritis
is an inflammatory condition that affects joints causing
pain, inflammation, breakdown, and eventual loss of the
cartilage of the joints.
-
Sj?gren’s Syndrome
is characterized by progressive destruction of the exocrine
glands (sweat glands, lachrymal glands, salivary glands,
tear glands). Symptoms include dry eyes, dry mouth,
persistent cough (dry airways), and lack of saliva.
-
Raynaud’s phenomenon
causes poor blood flow to the hands and feet leading to
sudden feelings of coldness in these extremities and causing
them to turn red. Poor blood flow to parts of the brain
might also be linked to depression and ‘brain fog’. Symptoms
include paling of the skin followed by bluish skin, then
redness, as well as, numbness, tingling, burning, and often
pain. Typically caused by exposure to cold.
-
Cryoglobulinemia
is a condition where the blood gels when exposed to cool
temperatures. Symptoms can be triggered to exposure to cool
temperatures and include intolerance to cold weather, muscle
and joint aches, fever upon exposure, and skin rashes. Many
symptoms of cryoglobulinemia dissipate when the patient
becomes warm again. One of the most common autoimmune
diseases reported among Hepatitis C Virus patients.
-
Vasculitis
features intense inflammation of the blood vessels with red
painful rashes along the veins. Associated with, or is an
aspect of, many autoimmune conditions including rheumatoid
arthritis, lupus, and systemic sclerosis.
-
Thyroid
Abnormalities
are common but, due to similar symptoms of Hepatitis C Virus
itself, it can be difficult to diagnose. Hyperthyroidism
(overactive) can cause insomnia, weight loss, palpitations,
warm and moist skin or ankle swelling. Hypothyroidism (under
active) can result in cold intolerance, sparse and dry hair,
scaly skin, and physical and mental sluggishness.
-
Type II
Diabetes
is a condition where enough insulin is produced but the body
does not respond to the action of the insulin. Symptoms
include fatigue, headaches, sweating, and weight loss or
weight gain.
-
Glomerulonephritis
is an immune-mediated (autoimmune) kidney disease where
immune complexes are deposited in the glomeruli, the parts
of the kidney responsible for filtering the blood. Symptoms
are uncomfortable and debilitating, including edema
(swelling and fluid retention) and a loss of blood protein
via the urine, known as proteinuria (urine tests reveal the
presence of albumin).
-
Lichen
Planus
is a skin disease that appears as flat, purplish pimples or
patches with fine, gray lines on the surface. Common sites
are wrists, forearms, ankles, abdomen, lower back, and in
the mouth. On mucous membranes, the lesions appear gray and
lacy. Nails may have ridges running lengthwise.
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