Homeopathic treatment for Hepatitis B/C :-
1.SULFUR 30X
2.BRYONIA 30X
3.CARDUUS MARIANUS in Q (Mother Tincture)
4.CHELIDONIUM MAJUS in Q (Mother Tincture)
5.LYCOPODIUM 1M(1000)
Take remedy 1 and 2 thrice a day half hour before meals followed by 20 drops each of 3 and 4 half hour after meals together in a half a cup of hot water and take 5 after a week of taking the above regularly just one dose a week. Avoid Chocolates, Coffee, Mints and Red Meat while taking Homeopathic Medicines and avoid all foodstuffs, which gives you constipation at all costs.
If there is any ambiguity about the dosage or the potency of the medicine please ask me before doing anything.
And keep me posted about your progress at least every three days.
It would be better if you send me the details of the patient exactly the way he or she feels not the doctors Diagnosis let the patient describe their own feeling exactly the way they are feeling the above will clear all in any case but it would be lots better if you send complete details.
Take Care and God Bless you !
2007-02-22 19:34:45
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answer #1
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answered by Soul Doctor 7
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There are currently several treatments for chronic hepatitis B that can increase a person's chance of clearing the infection. Treatments are available in the form of antivirals such as lamivudine and adefovir and immune system modulators such as interferon alpha (Uniferon). There are several other antivirals under investigation. Roughly, all of the currently available treatments, when used alone, are about equally efficacious. However, some individuals are much more likely to respond than others. It does not appear that combination therapy offers any advantages. In general, each works by reducing the viral load by several orders of magnitude thus helping a body's immune system clear the infection.
hope this helps.
2007-02-23 03:10:43
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answer #2
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answered by Sammy76 2
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If you are diagnosed with hepatitis B, it is likely that your GP will refer to you a specialist, usually a hepatologist (a liver specialist).
Most people tend to be free of symptoms and recover completely within a couple of months, never going on to develop chronic hepatitis.
There is usually no specific treatment for acute (short-term) hepatitis B. Unless your symptoms are particularly severe, you should be able to manage them at home
To know more measures to improve liver you can see all information related to fatty liver diseases at:http://adola.net/go/fattyliver-bible/
2014-07-15 21:31:28
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I know I've read about hepatitis B but I can't remember much about it. If you want correct information, why don't you enter "hepatitis B" into your browser and find out what the medical experts say?
2007-02-23 03:08:06
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answer #4
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answered by Tabitha 4
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It usually goes away by itself. Three years, what are the other Hepatitis test say. HBSAB especially. If your doctor isn't helping ask to see another.
2007-02-23 03:10:16
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Treatment of patients who are HBeAg positive
Randomised controlled trials and subsequent meta-analyses have shown that IFN therapy (5-10 million units thrice weekly for 4-6 months) is effective. Loss of HBeAg is more common in IFN-treated patients (33%) compared with controls (12%), HBV-DNA becomes undetectable and transaminase levels normalise more frequently in IFN-treated patients. Predictors of IFN response included high serum transaminase activity, low circulating HBV-DNA levels, female sex and greater degrees of inflammatory activity in liver biopsy. Prolonging therapy up to 1 year may increase response rates in patients who still have HBeAg at the end of 4 months therapy. Long-term follow-up of patients responding to IFN has shown reduced incidence of cirrhosis and its complications, including HCC. Patients with well-compensated liver cirrhosis (Child's Class A) can be safely and effectively treated with IFN; clearance of HBeAg, reduction in HBV-DNA and clinical improvement is observed in up to 33% of treated patients. However, patients with more advanced liver disease may experience severe and potentially life-threatening side-effects with IFN which is therefore best avoided except in specialist centres. Problems with IFN treatment include the relatively high rate of side-effects, the requirement for injection and cost as discussed in the review on treatment of HCV infection.
Lamivudine contrasts with IFN in that it is relatively free from side-effects and is available as an oral preparation. Lamivudine (100 mg per day) for 52 weeks is associated with a significantly increased rate of HBeAg loss, reduction in serum transaminase activity and improvement in liver histology, at frequencies similar to those seen with IFN. Interestingly, predictors of response to lamivudine are very similar to those reported for IFN, and up to 25% of patients who do respond subsequently become HBsAg negative. Even in patients who do not respond, lamivudine significantly reduces circulating HBV-DNA levels through discontinuing therapy, which is then followed by increasing HBV-DNA levels and serum transaminase activity to pre-treatment levels. Extended treatment with lamivudine (>1 year) leads to a cumulative increase in the number of patients who lose HBeAg or detectable HBV-DNA (47% treated patients at 4 years compared with 22% at 1 year). Unfortunately, extended lamivudine treatment is associated with a progressive appearance of lamivudine resistant strains of HBV (67% at 4 years compared with 17% at 1 year). However, even patients who develop lamivudine resistance can subsequently become HBeAg negative and show improvement in serum transaminases. Lamivudine has also been shown to be safe and effective in patients with decompensated cirrhosis. Treatment of such patients may reduce the need for liver transplantation, although extended therapy with lamivudine has to be balanced against the potential for the appearance of lamivudine resistant strains and availability of liver transplantation.
Trials of combination therapy of HBeAg positive patients with IFN and lamivudine have produced conflicting results.
What I need to know about Hepatitis B
On this page:
What is hepatitis B?
What causes hepatitis B?
How could I get hepatitis B?
What are the symptoms?
What are the tests for hepatitis B?
How is hepatitis B treated?
How can I protect myself?
For More Information
Acknowledgments
What is hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B is a liver disease.
Hepatitis (HEP-ah-TY-tis) makes your liver swell and stops it from working right.
You need a healthy liver. The liver does many things to keep you alive. The liver fights infections and stops bleeding. It removes drugs and other poisons from your blood. The liver also stores energy for when you need it.
[Top]
What causes hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B is caused by a virus.
A virus is a germ that causes sickness. (For example, the flu is caused by a virus.) People can pass viruses to each other. The virus that causes hepatitis B is called the hepatitis B virus.
[Top]
How could I get hepatitis B?
Hepatitis B spreads by contact with an infected person's blood, semen, or other body fluid.
You could get hepatitis B by
having sex with an infected person without using a condom
sharing drug needles
having a tattoo or body piercing done with dirty tools that were used on someone else
getting pricked with a needle that has infected blood on it (health care workers can get hepatitis B this way)
living with someone who has hepatitis B
sharing a toothbrush or razor with an infected person
traveling to countries where hepatitis B is common
An infected woman can give hepatitis B to her baby at birth.
You can NOT get hepatitis B by
shaking hands with an infected person
hugging an infected person
sitting next to an infected person
[Top]
What are the symptoms?
Hepatitis B can make you feel like you have the flu.
You might
feel tired
feel sick to your stomach
have a fever
not want to eat
have stomach pain
have diarrhea
Some people have
dark yellow urine
light-colored stools
yellowish eyes and skin
Some people don’t have any symptoms.
If you have symptoms or think you might have hepatitis B, go to a doctor.
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What are the tests for hepatitis B?
To check for hepatitis B, the doctor will test your blood.
These tests show if you have hepatitis B and how serious it is.
The doctor will take some blood to check for hepatitis B.
The doctor may also do a liver biopsy.
A biopsy (BYE-op-see) is a simple test. The doctor removes a tiny piece of your liver through a needle. The doctor checks the piece of liver for signs of hepatitis B and liver damage.
[Top]
How is hepatitis B treated?
Treatment for hepatitis B may involve
A drug called interferon (in-ter-FEAR-on). It is given through shots. Most people are treated for 4 months.
A drug called lamivudine (la-MIV-you-deen). You take it by mouth once a day. Treatment is usually for one year.
Hepatitis B is treated through shots of medicine.
A drug called adefovir dipivoxil (uh-DEH-foh-veer dih-pih-VOX-ill). You take it by mouth once a day. Treatment is usually for one year.
Surgery. Over time, hepatitis B may cause your liver to stop working. If that happens, you will need a new liver. The surgery is called a liver transplant. It involves taking out the old, damaged liver and putting in a new, healthy one from a donor.
2007-02-27 02:50:04
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answer #6
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answered by sri k 2
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