Incubation period
2 weeks – 4 months
Symptoms
Abdominal pain, Dark urine, Fever, Loss of appetite, Joint pain, Fatigue, Jaundice
Possible complications
Liver disease, Kidney problems, Inflammation of blood vessels
About Hepatitis B
Hepatitis B is a virus that infects the liver. Unlike many infections, it’s not caught by simply being near someone with the disease; it can only be caught – with rare exceptions – from infected blood or through sexual contact. The largest risk factors are injecting drugs and a man having unprotected sex with a man with hepatitis B.
Children are only usually at risk of contracting hepatitis B if they’re born to hepatitis B-infected mothers, live with someone who has hepatitis B or are travelling to or planning to live in a country where hepatitis B is widespread.
Once a child contracts this virus, they are more at risk than adults of it becoming a chronic (long-term) infection.
Hepatitis B symptoms
Some people, especially young children, may not show any symptoms of having hepatitis B. When symptoms do develop, they typically include:
- Abdominal pain
- Dark urine
- Fever
- Joint pain
- Loss of appetite
- Nausea and vomiting
- Weakness and fatigue
- Yellowing of the skin and the whites of the eyes (jaundice)