In Africa, many people have yellow eyes. Is that because they are infected with hepatitis A? And do they have permanent liver damage?

Last week I went on a trip to Senegal. There I saw that almost all inhabitants have yellow eyes. My father said that it is because they have or have had hepatitis A and that they have permanent liver damage, which means that the average age is low in those areas.

I was quite shocked by that, so I did some research on hepatitis A. Everywhere it says that the yellow eyes are only temporary, that there is no permanent liver damage and that the disease is over after a few weeks.

How about that?

Asker: Astrid, 17 years old

Answer

Indeed, it is unlikely that this is hepatitis A: hep A is indeed an acute disease, ie it comes on quickly and does not last very long, a maximum of a few weeks, as you have looked up carefully. You may have yellow eyes, but you are also very ill with a high fever, fatigue, etc… Hep A also never causes permanent pain, unlike Hep B: this form of jaundice is also common in Africa and can be permanent cause liver problems, eg yellow eyes (‘icterus’).

But most likely this is a chronic irritation of the conjunctiva of the eye (the ‘coniunctiva’), which in many Africans is indeed manifested by a yellow-brown discoloration of the whites of the eyes. Furthermore, those people have little trouble with it, and not much can be done about it, unless they live in a less dust-free environment. But that’s not possible for everyone…

dr. Ludwig Apers, Institute of Tropical Medicine

Answered by

Pieter Van Dooren

science journalist with broad knowledge

In Africa, many people have yellow eyes.  Is that because they are infected with hepatitis A?  And do they have permanent liver damage?

Institute of Tropical Medicine Antwerp
Nationalestraat 155 2000 Antwerp
http://www.itg.be/

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