8 Ways You Can Protect Your Liver When You’re Living With Hepatitis C

Hepatitis C is the leading cause of severe liver disease and liver cancer, both of which can be fatal. So, what are some of the ways you can protect your liver when you’re living with hepatitis C?

To keep your liver healthy when living with hepatitis C, the most important thing to do is to follow a hepatitis C treatment plan outlined by your hepatitis specialist, which is usually not your primary care doctor, but a board certified doctor with additional training to treat infectious diseases, liver diseases, or gastroenterologist disorders, among a few others. There are a number of treatment options available to slow or even stop damage to the liver and dramatically reduce your risk for hepatitis C-related complications.

In addition to a treatment plan described by your immunology specialist, these eight simple steps can help keep the liver healthy in the battle against hepatitis C:

1. Avoid Alcohol

Alcohol is toxic to the liver, and drinking alcohol is associated with a faster progression of liver disease. For patients with hepatitis C, there is no safe amount of alcohol. There is no measure of how much alcohol is harmful; therefore the best recommendation is not to drink any.

2. Minimize Acetaminophen Use

Acetaminophen (commonly found in over-the-counter pain relievers such as Sudafed) can cause damage on its own, so if the liver is already compromised, the chances of liver damage are higher. Limiting the use of pain medications containing acetaminophen to less than 2,000 milligrams a day can lower the chances of damaging the liver further.

3. Discuss All Medications or Supplements with Your Doctor

Drugs that are metabolized by the liver may cause further harm when the liver is already damaged. Even “natural” supplements can interfere with liver function and cause severe side effects. It’s best to inform your doctor in on all the medications being taken.

4. Maintain a Healthy Weight Through Diet and Exercise

The fat built up in the liver when you’re overweight can contribute to insulin resistance and liver damage from fibrosis, or scarring, of the liver. Exercising regularly and making other lifestyle changes like eating healthy foods and watching your calorie intake can help to protect the liver.

5. Don’t Give Up Coffee

According to preliminary research in a study of 766 participants conducted by the National Institutes of Health, patients who drank three or more cups of coffee per day had a 50 percent lower risk of disease progression.

6. Get Vaccinated

It’s best to be proactive and get tested for other viruses that affect the liver, like hepatitis A and hepatitis B, and get vaccinated against them to reduce the risk for further liver damage.

7. Talk About Sex

It’s not uncommon to have a normal sex life in a monogamous relationship where one partner has chronic hepatitis C. The transmission of hepatitis C through sex is low, and the couple always has the decision to use barrier protection. Using barrier protection is recommended for people having sex with multiple partners to help protect others from hepatitis C and protect themselves against sexually transmitted diseases like HIV, which can accelerate liver damage.

8. Keeping Appointments for Regular Checkups

For chronic hepatitis C, most patients will see their doctor every three to six months, depending on the severity of the illness and the type of treatment being performed. Don’t skip these appointments. Use them as opportunities to evaluate the best care steps as well as overall condition.

To schedule an appointment with one of our board certified specialists call (407) 647-3960 or click here to request an appointment.

More Articles

Dr. DeJesus Recognized by Orlando Magazine

For the 5th consecutive year, Dr. DeJesus has been recognized by his peers in Orlando Magazine for his work as medical director at Orlando Immunology Center. Dr. DeJesus is a graduate from the University of Puerto Rico, School of Medicine. He completed his Internal Medicine training and Infectious Disease fellowship at the Medical College of…

Read More

Join OIC at the 2015 AIDS Walk Orlando

Orlando Immunology Center is pleased to announce that we will again be sponsoring a team at this year’s 2015 AIDS Walk Orlando.  If you are interested in joining our team or donating to this worthwhile cause, please let us know. Saturday, March 28, 2015 In Florida, 15% of all new HIV infections reported among females…

Read More

OIC Wins Wave Award for Favorite Local Healthcare Professional

The Orlando Immunology Center (OIC) announced today they have received the Central Florida/Orlando 2015 Watermark Awards for Variety and Excellence (WAVE) Award for favorite local healthcare professional. “We see this as a huge honor and will continue to do everything in our power to help patients from all walks of life be healthy, happy and…

Read More
entrepreneurs-img

Dr. DeJesus Finalist for the Watermark’s WAVE Award

Our very own Dr. Edwin DeJesus is a finalist for the Watermark’s WAVE Award for Favorite Health Care Professional. One of the most hard working physicians around, Dr. DeJesus is committed to assisting those in the community! To vote by computer, go to watermarkonline.com To vote on the web browser on your phone, use this link. Note: Participants…

Read More
Dr. DeJesus’s Daily image

Dr. DeJesus’s Daily News Capsule

Follow Edwin DeJesus, M.D., as he reports from the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) in Boston, Massachusetts this week. He is presenting several times and will be reporting in each day. Day 1: February 22 Greetings everyone from beautiful Boston, where this year’s 23rd CROI, or Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, brings the best…

Read More
Dr. DeJesus’s Daily image

Dr. DeJesus Named Favorite Health Care Professional in Watermark’s WAVE Awards

Thank you for voting Edwin DeJesus, M.D., as your choice for Favorite Health Care Professional in Central Florida in Watermark’s WAVE Awards. “I am honored to be recognized by the Watermark readers with this WAVE Award, and I accept it in the name of our wonderful, caring and dedicated staff,” says Dr. DeJesus. “We sincerely thank you for trusting us…

Read More
National Women and Girls HIV AIDS img

National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day

National Women and Girls HIV/AIDS Awareness Day, sponsored by the Office of Women’s Health of the Department of Health and Human Services, is observed on March 10. The goals of this event are to raise awareness about the need for all women, especially pregnant women, to be tested and treated for HIV. HIV remains an important health issue…

Read More
Top 5 Myths About Safe Sex img

Top 5 Myths About Safe Sex

Think you know what it means to practice “safe sex”? Think again. In this post we debunk some of the most common misconceptions about safe sex and give you tips to protect yourself. Myth #1: You Can Tell if Your Potential Partner Has an STD This is one of the biggest, and most dangerous myths.…

Read More
HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness img

HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day 2016

Today, June 5th, is HIV Long-Term Survivors Awareness Day. It “celebrates those who have defied the odds by living with HIV for decades. Our focus is on ensuring that HIV Long-Term Survivors and Older Adults Living with HIV are not invisible and forgotten in the current HIV dialogue.”

Read More
white-house img

35th Anniversary of HIV/AIDS in America

June 5, 2016 marks the 35th Anniversary of the first documented case of HIV/AIDS in America. The Presidents statement today specifically mentions treatment as prevention (TasP) and pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) as “revolutionary tools” highlighting their importance to ending the epidemic. OUR TEAM REQUEST AN APPOINTMENT

Read More
First Hospital Approved img

First Hospital Approved to Perform Organ Transplants From HIV Positive Donors

The first hospital is approved to perform organ transplants from HIV Positive donors. In a first that gives HIV-infected patients yet another chance for long lives, surgeons at Johns Hopkins University Medical Center have transplanted a kidney and a liver from a dead donor who was HIV-positive into two HIV-positive recipients. The transplant surgeries, which used…

Read More
OIC-Orlando-Immunology-Center-donate-blood-img

OneBlood Grieves the Loss of Rodolfo Ayala Ayalaone

OneBlood, the local blood center, is grieving the loss of one of its own team members, Rodolfo Ayala Ayala, who sadly was among the victims of the tragic mass shooting at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando. OIC sends love and prayers to the family, friends and OneBlood as they morn the horrible loss of someone so special.…

Read More
Orlando-Immunology-Center-Free-Counseling-Resource-Guide-img

Free Counseling Resource Guide

[Updated 6/22/16] Click Here for the Orlando Immunology Center Free Counseling Resource Guide Updated 6/22/16 at 9:05am Orlando Immunology Center has created this Free Counseling Resource Guide for a quick reference to counseling services. OIC is incredibly saddened by the horrible mass shooting in our own community at Pulse Nightclub. Our OIC family sends love and prayers to…

Read More