The clinical picture of hepatitis C virus as a concomitant infection with fascioliasis.

2006 
: Hepatitis C and human fascioliasis are two of the most important public health problems locally and internationally. Each one has its own complications regarding spreading to man, clinical picture, laboratory and serologic diagnosis, treatment and prevention. Concomitant human infection with both magnified the complications. Clinically, both diseases (HCV and fascioliasis) have their own broad signs and symptoms. In concomitant infection, the clinical pictures of both showed some variations. The most common feature in fascioliasis and HCV patients was easy fatigability in 78.6% and the lowest was 7.18% for each of tympanic abdomen, tender colon, tender right upper quadrant, itching, arthritis, epi-gastric pain, and right quadrant pain. The eosinophilia % ranged from 5-24 and the haemoglobin ranged from 7-11.1 gm/dl. In patients with fascioliasis alone, the most come feature was pallor in 96.15% and the lowest was 3.85% for each of splenomegaly, ascites and itching. Eosinophilia % ranged from 1 to 22 and haemoglobin ranged from 6-12 gm/dl. In general, the double infection with both HCV and fascioliasis magnified the laboratory and clinical pictures of such patients.
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