Sunday, June 17, 2012

Donating Blood

If you are a blood donor, you may receive blood collection agency notifying you that you may be infected with hepatitis B.

First, do not panic. The letter does not necessarily mean that you are infected with hepatitis B.

All donated blood is screened for hepatitis B, as well as other blood-borne viruses such as HIV and hepatitis C. Many blood banks use the "hepatitis B core antibody" test to screen donor blood for potential hepatitis B infection. This test can detect whether a person might have been exposed to the hepatitis B virus, but by itself this blood test doesn't tell whether the person is actually infected or not. This is why it is very important to see your doctor for additional hepatitis B blood tests.

Further Blood Tests Are Needed
If the blood bank tells you that the "hepatitis B core antibody" test was positive, you could be:
§ chronically infected with hepatitis B;
§ recovering from an infection;
§ already recovered from a past infection;
§ the result could be a false positive.

You won't know without further blood tests. This is why it is so important that you see your doctor for follow-up hepatitis B testing. 

1 comment:

  1. I was diagnosed as HEPATITIS B carrier in 2013 with fibrosis of the
    liver already present. I started on antiviral medications which
    reduced the viral load initially. After a couple of years the virus
    became resistant. I started on HEPATITIS B Herbal treatment from
    ULTIMATE LIFE CLINIC (www.ultimatelifeclinic.com) in March, 2020. Their
    treatment totally reversed the virus. I did another blood test after
    the 6 months long treatment and tested negative to the virus. Amazing
    treatment! This treatment is a breakthrough for all HBV carriers.

    ReplyDelete