Officially in 1997, the US Food and Drug Administration recognized the hepatitis G virus as harmless to humans. But recent research suggests otherwise. They can be infected through blood
The researchers say the virus has triggered an increase in the number of people with cirrhosis and liver cancer. They shared these considerations in the pages of the journal Immunological Studies. By the way, there is reason to believe that simultaneous HIV infection increases the activity of the immune system.
Mugis Uddin Ahmed, an employee of the King Abdel Aziz Hospital in Saudi Arabia, states: “From the moment the virus was declared safe, donated blood was no longer checked for its presence. I analyzed the scientific literature over the past 16 years and came to the conclusion that the virus is quite widespread in the world. Moreover, there is a link between the virus and hepatitis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma, hematological disorders and hematological malignancies."