Pediatric hepatitis A
Pediatric hepatitis A (hep·a·ti·tis) is the most common and least serious of the pediatric forms of hepatitis. Hepatitis A can be prevented with a two-part vaccine typically administered when the child is 1 year or older.
What is pediatric hepatitis A?
Pediatric hepatitis A is a virus that causes a child’s liver tissue to swell and become inflamed.
What are the signs and symptoms of pediatric hepatitis A?
Hepatitis A can often be tricky to diagnose, as the symptoms typically appear two to six weeks after the child is exposed to the virus. This makes virus easier to spread among young children, as caregivers are often unaware their child has the condition. Symptoms rarely appear in children under the age of 6.
Children older than 6 with hepatitis A often exhibit flu-like symptoms, including:
Abdominal pain over the liver
Fatigue
Fever
Light-colored stool
Urine that is dark in color
What are the causes of pediatric hepatitis A?
Hepatitis A is contracted when a child comes in contact with an infected person’s stool or blood.
It most commonly occurs in:
Daycares - employees come in contact with an infected child and change multiple diapers in succession without washing their hands.
Restaurants - an infected employee contaminates the food by not washing their hands after using the bathroom.
Hepatitis A can be prevented with a two-part vaccine typically administered when the child is 1 year or older.
Pediatric hepatitis A doctors and providers
Amal Aqul, MDPediatric Hepatologist
Lauren Lazar, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Megha Mehta, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Charina Ramirez, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Norberto Rodriguez-Baez, MDPediatric Hepatologist
Isabel Rojas Santamaria, MDPediatric Gastroenterologist
Phuong Luu, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Gastroenterology
To Nhu Nguyen, PA-CPhysician Assistant - Gastroenterology
Jennifer Peacock, APRN, PNP-PCNurse Practitioner - Gastroenterology
Shabina Walji-Virani, APRN, PNP-PCNurse Practitioner - Gastroenterology