JakartaGlobe-May 18, 2022

Indonesia on Wednesday reported that it had identified 14 suspected cases of acute hepatitis of unknown origin, thirteen of which were still waiting for their test results before being classified as a probable case. The country originally had 27 suspected cases of unexplained liver disease. The Health Ministry later discarded 13 cases after test results proved reactive to Hepatitis A, B, or other pathogens. Some of the discarded cases involved patients older than 16. The Health Ministry will classify the patient as a probable case if they test negative for Hepatitis A-E and/or other etiologies. The patients must also be 16 years old or younger. Another criterion is that the patient’s serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT) and serum glutamic pyruvic transaminase (SGPT) levels should exceed international units per liter (IU/L). To date, six children have died from a suspected case of mysterious hepatitis in Indonesia. The youngest was only two months old, the Health Ministry reported. The government data showed that all 14 patients were under the age of 16. Read more at: https://jakartaglobe.id/news/indonesia-now-has-14-suspected-acute-hepatitis-cases