(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.

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.