Hepatitis B symptoms: when not to wait for the next follow-up
A practical guide to common hepatitis B and liver disease symptoms, urgent warning signs, and what reports and medicines to bring before care.
- Audience
- Patients and families
- Published
- 2026-06-26
- Last reviewed
- 2026-06-26
Many people have no symptoms, so do not rely only on how you feel
Hepatitis B can have no obvious symptoms, especially in chronic infection or early liver disease. Feeling normal does not mean screening, follow-up, or treatment assessment is unnecessary. Follow-up depends on HBsAg, HBV DNA, ALT/AST, platelets, imaging, and clinical judgment.
If symptoms appear, do not explain everything as stress, heatiness, or bad food. CDC lists common hepatitis B symptoms such as fatigue, fever, poor appetite, nausea or vomiting, abdominal pain, joint pain, dark urine, pale stool, and yellow skin or eyes. These symptoms need interpretation with tests and context.
These situations should not wait for a routine visit
Seek care promptly for clearly worsening jaundice, urine that looks like strong tea, severe or persistent vomiting, obvious abdominal swelling, leg swelling, easy bleeding or bruising, fever with chills, confusion, unusual sleepiness, reversed or confused speech, vomiting blood, or black tar-like stools. People already known to have cirrhosis, significant fibrosis, or antiviral treatment should not delay.
Vomiting blood, black stools, confusion, rapid abdominal swelling, and severe jaundice may signal serious liver complications or worsening liver function. Do not try to push through at home with liver-protection pills, herbs, anti-nausea medicines, or pain medicines.
What to bring to urgent care or clinic
If possible, bring recent hepatitis B reports: HBsAg, HBeAg/anti-HBe, HBV DNA, ALT/AST, bilirubin, albumin, INR, platelets, liver ultrasound, or elastography. Bring all medicines too, including entecavir, tenofovir, immune-suppressing medicines, chemotherapy, pain medicines, herbs, supplements, and weight-loss products.
Tell the clinician directly if symptoms started after stopping medicine, missed doses, alcohol use, starting a new medicine, chemotherapy or immune-suppressing treatment, the postpartum period, or recent blood exposure. The timeline matters: when symptoms began, whether they are getting worse, fever, vomiting blood or black stool, and whether urine or stool color changed.
Things not to manage on your own
Do not stop antivirals or temporarily increase the dose on your own. Do not mix multiple liver-protection pills, herbs, or supplements. Do not use large amounts of pain or fever medicine for abdominal pain or fever without advice. Do not replace evaluation of jaundice, black stool, vomiting blood, or mental-status changes with waiting a few days.
If your clinician already gave an emergency plan, follow that plan. If not, it is safer to contact clinic, emergency care, or the local emergency system early, especially if symptoms worsen quickly or you already have cirrhosis.
Ask before you need emergency care
- Which symptoms should make me contact you the same day?
- Which situations should go directly to emergency care?
- If I feel unwell after missed doses or stopping medicine, whom should I contact first?
- Do I have cirrhosis or variceal bleeding risk?
- Can I use common pain medicines, fever medicines, herbs, or supplements?
- If jaundice, abdominal swelling, black stool, or confusion happens, which reports should I bring?
Action checklist
Keep your latest HBV DNA, ALT/AST, bilirubin, INR, platelet, and ultrasound reports on your phone. Save photos of medicines and supplements. Record when symptoms started. Seek care quickly for vomiting blood, black stools, confusion, rapid abdominal swelling, or obvious jaundice. Do not stop, increase, or replace medicines with herbs on your own. Ask your clinician to write down your urgent-contact conditions.
References
CDC Hepatitis B Basics
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention · accessed 2026-06-26
NIDDK Cirrhosis Symptoms and Causes
National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases · accessed 2026-06-26
VA Cirrhosis Patient Guide
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs · accessed 2026-06-26
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