(Educational information only; not medical advice).

TL;DR

  • Before modern antiviral treatments for Hepatitis C existed, some naturopathic protocols used diet, lifestyle and many supplements to try to support liver health.

  • A retrospective review of 41 people showed modest liver-enzyme improvements (e.g., ALT reductions) when diet and supplements were used [1].

  • Today, direct-acting antivirals (DAAs) are the standard for Hep C, so natural approaches are usually used as supportive care—not standalone treatment.

  • Lifestyle habits (healthy diet, detox support, antioxidant nutrients) still matter for liver resilience.

The Older Study in Plain Language

In the year 2000, a review of 41 patients with chronic hepatitis C (some not treated yet with interferon or other drugs) followed a protocol that included:

  • A diet of whole foods (muesli breakfast, plenty of veggies, fish/fish oil, no alcohol/smoking)

  • Supplements such as milk-thistle (silymarin), N-acetyl-cysteine (NAC), ursodeoxycholic acid, selenium, cod liver oil, and many more [1].

  • After at least one month on the protocol, 7 of 14 patients (those with complete data) had greater than 25% reduction in a liver-enzyme (ALT) value; average ALT reduction ~35 U/L (p = 0.026) [1].

The authors noted many limitations—no viral load data, no randomized control, short follow-up—but it showed that a lifestyle-based protocol might support liver health.

What’s Changed Since Then?

  • Modern standard care for hepatitis C now uses direct-acting antiviral drugs (DAAs) which can cure the infection in most cases.

  • Natural-medicine reviews now ask: what role do diet + supplements play after antiviral treatment, or for people who can’t take antivirals?

    • A 2012 review in Viruses examined natural compounds interfering with HCV life-cycle [2].

    • A 2017/2019 evidence review found many users with liver disease also take complementary/alternative medicines — but warned about safety, herb-drug interactions and lack of strong RCTs [3].

  • Bottom-line: Natural & nutritional support doesn’t replace antivirals, but lifestyle support remains valuable for liver resilience, reducing inflammation and improving outcomes.

What This Means for You

  • If you or a clinician is supporting someone with hepatitis C (or past infection), lifestyle plus diet + nutrient support may help reduce liver stress and support general health.

  • Key habits:

    • Whole-food diet rich in vegetables, fish (omega-3s), minimal alcohol/smoking

    • Maintaining adequate protein, hydration

    • Avoiding refined sugars and ultra-processed foods

    • Ensuring nutrient status: selenium, NAC/antioxidants, milk-thistle (under supervision)

  • But always: Treatment of the viral infection is primary (talk to doctors trained in natural healthcare and hepatologists). Natural strategies are adjunct.

Related Articles:

Surviving Hepatitis C

Selected References

  1. Milliman WB, Lamson DW, Brignall MS. Altern Med Rev. 2000 Aug;5(4):355-370. “Hepatitis C; a retrospective study, literature review, and naturopathic protocol.”  

  2. Viruses 20124(10), 2197-2217 Hepatitis C Virus and Natural Compounds: A New Antiviral Approach?
  3. Seeff LB. “Herbal product use by persons enrolled in the hepatitis C Antiviral Long-Term Treatment Against Cirrhosis (HALT-C) Trial.” Hepatology. 2008;48(5):1470-1477.