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Detachable Needles on Syringes Promote Hepatitis C Transmission, Study Says

Abstract
In San Francisco Friday at the 17th Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections, Yale University School of Medicine researchers will present a study, reportedly the first of its kind, of the viability of hepatitis C virus (HCV) in used syringes. When shared among injecting drug users, syringes with detachable needles are more likely to transfer HCV from one person to another, the results show. In their experiment, Dr. Elijah Paintsil and colleagues loaded HCV-infected blood into syringes, depressed the plunger, and measured the amount of HCV in the residual blood at that time and again nine weeks later. In detachable-needle syringes, HCV persisted at nine weeks in most temperatures. In syringes with attached needles, much less viable HCV was noted. Paintsil said prevention specialists operating needle-exchange programs should be aware of the study’s results, though he noted that detachable-needle syringes are used much more commonly by drug injectors outside the United States.
Source
http://www.latimes.com
Date of Publication
02/17/2010
Author
Thomas H. Maugh II
Article Type
General media
Article Category
Medical News
Subjects
Hepatitis C
Hepatitis Transmission
Medical Schools
Needles
Studies or Surveys

Disclaimer: NPIN provides this information as a public service only. The views and information provided about the materials, funding opportunities, and organizations do not necessarily state or reflect those of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, CDC, or NPIN.

cdcnpin.org News Record #54787

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