Disease Control and Prevention, or the authors' affiliated institutions. Use of trade names is for identification only and does not imply endorsement by any of the groups named above.All material published in Emerging Infectious Diseases is in the public domain and may be used and reprinted without special permission; proper citation, however, is required.
Here we review modern notions about biological properties of hepatitis C virus, geographic distribution of its genotypes, peculiarities of immune reactions during chronic HCV infection, and role of viral replication in the infectious process. The concept of antiviral protection in liver parenchymal cells suggests suppression of biosynthetic reactions in hepatocytes resulting in inhibition of viral replication and focal degradation of the cytoplasm in infected cells followed by exocytosis and elimination of viral particles (cytosanation without cytodestruction). The recovery of structural characteristics in hepatocytes is associated with intracellular regeneration. Special accent is placed on reversibility of liver fibrosis in chronic HCV infection due to resorption of collagen fibers by hepatocytes. These data indicate that the therapy of liver fibrosis holds much promise.
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