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Current Possibilities to Assess the Degree of Liver Fibrosis in Patients with Haemophilia Infected with HCV - Review
2015
Advances in Clinical and Experimental Medicine
Haemophilia is an entity, wherein the HCV infection rate is greater than in the general population and ranges between 70-90%. The majority of HCV infections were acquired by hemophiliacs in the 1980s, by the use of infected cryoprecipitate or fresh frozen plasma preparations. It is therefore highly likely that many of them, more than twenty years after the infection, have developed advanced liver disease. Until recently, in order to assess its severity, it was necessary to perform a liver
doi:10.17219/acem/22913
pmid:26469113
fatcat:2oiqdm2q5jaifl3d3ptaln6ewe