Hepatitis C harms the liver gradually and most people who suffer
from the disease do not have any idea about their health problems until liver
damage comes to light decades later.
It is reckoned that approximately 180 million people all
over the world suffer from chronic hepatitis C, with more than 4 million of
these cases in the United
States, according to the National Institutes
of Health.
Natalie Cole’s publicist announced in a statement released on
Wednesday that the Grammy-winning singer discovered her disease during a
routine medical examination and that her ailment is probably a result of her
drug use in the past.
Usually, hepatitis C is spread when contacting infected
blood. However, in the U.S.,
the most frequent way to develop it is by sharing needles and other
paraphernalia generally used to inject illegal drugs, Dr. Joseph Rahimian, an
infectious disease specialist at St. Vincent’s Hospital in New York City, informed FOXNews.com.
The 58-year-old daughter of Nat King Cole was addicted to
LSD, cocaine and heroin before a long hospitalization in rehab in 1984 which
she confessed in her autobiography.
Dr. Graham Woolf, associate clinical professor of medicine
at UCLA/Cedars Sinai Medical Center, reported that Cole has had an excellent reaction
to her medication and is now virus negative. “This gives her an increased
chance of cure,” he stated. However, the doctor said that Natalie Cole has
experienced side effects from the anti-viral drug, which is the only FDA
allowed medication in order to treat hepatitis C. According to Dr. Graham
Woolf, the singer’s side effects consist of exhaustion, muscle pains and lack
of fluids, but he said that she was getting better.
The standard treatment for hepatitis C comprises weekly
injections of a drug named pegylated interferon alpha, plus twice-daily oral
doses of ribavirin, as said by the Mayo Clinic.