Back to Health Guide
Patient Education2 min read

Hepatitis B

Overview

Hepatitis B is a viral infection of the liver caused by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). About 5% of adults exposed develop chronic infection that can quietly damage the liver over decades, leading to cirrhosis or liver cancer. Most people have no symptoms in the early years — the only way to know is a blood test. There is a highly effective vaccine that prevents it, and modern medications can keep chronic infection well-controlled, although a complete cure for chronic HBV is not yet available.

Symptoms

1

Often no symptoms — chronic infection is usually silent

2

Fatigue and loss of appetite

3

Mild discomfort in the upper-right abdomen

4

Yellowing of skin or eyes (jaundice) — late sign

5

Dark urine or pale-colored stools

6

Joint pain or low-grade fever in the acute phase

How It's Transmitted

Mother-to-child during birth (most common globally)

Unprotected sexual contact with an infected partner

Sharing needles, razors, or toothbrushes with an infected person

Unsterile medical, dental, or tattoo equipment

Blood transfusions before screening was widespread (rare today)

NOT spread by hugging, sharing food, sneezing, or casual contact

Living with HBV & Prevention

Get the HBV vaccine — 3 doses give >95% lifelong protection (free for children in Saudi Arabia)

If chronic, see a hepatologist every 6 months for liver enzymes, viral load, and ultrasound

Avoid alcohol completely — it dramatically accelerates liver damage

Family members and sexual partners should be tested and vaccinated

Antiviral medication (entecavir or tenofovir) is highly effective when treatment is needed

You can have a normal life — work, marry, and have children — careful planning prevents transmission

When to Get Tested

Get tested if your mother had HBV, you have a family member with HBV, you have unexplained elevated liver enzymes, or you are pregnant. People with chronic HBV need regular ultrasound and AFP blood tests every 6 months to screen for liver cancer — early detection saves lives.

Have questions or need a consultation?

Our GI specialists are ready to help you

Book Appointment Now