Jaundice
From IDWiki
Background
- Jaundice is yellow discolouration of the body due to excess bilirubin (i.e. hyperbilirubinemia)
- Divided into conjugated (direct) and unconjugated (indirect)
Pathophysiology
- Unconjugated bilirubin is a degradation product of heme, produced by defective or end-of-life erythrocytes
- Heme is metabolized to biliverdin and then to unconjugated bilirubin in the reticuloendothelial system
- The unconjugated bilirubin is bound to albumin and transported to the liver, where the hepatocytes take it up and conjugate it to glucuronic acid
- Conjugated bilirubin is soluble in bile and excreted into the bile canaliculi, where it proceeds down the bile ducts and is stored in the bile ducts
- Conjugated bilirubin eventually reaches the small bowel through the common bile duct and ampulla of Vater
- Colonic bacteria deconjugate bilirubin and metabolize it into urobilinogen
- 80% is metabolized into stercolin and excreted in stool
- 20% is reabsorbed and enters back into enterohepatic circulation
- Some urobilinogen that is reabsorbed is then excreted in urine, where it oxidizes to urobilin and causes yellowing of urine
Etiologies
Unconjugated Hyperbilirubinemia
- Overproduction: hemolysis, Wilson disease, extravasation, shunt yperbilirubinemia
- Reduced uptake: portosystemic shunt, drugs, Gilbert syndrome
- Conjugation defect
- Acquired: neonatal, maternal milk, Lucy-Driscoll, hyperthyroidism, chronic persistent hepatitis, advanced cirrhosis
- Inherited: Crigler-Najjar syndrome, Gilbert syndrome
Conjugated or Combined Hyperbilirubinemia
- Intrahepatic cholestasis: PBC, PSC, viral hepatitis, progressive familial intrahepatis cholestasis, intrahepatic cholestasis of pregnancy, total parenteral nutrition, post-operative
- Drugs and toxins: alcoholic hepatitis, corticosteroids, chlorpromazine, some herbal medications, arsenic
- Infiltrative diseases, including amyloidosis, lymphoma, sarcoidosis, tuberculosis
- Sickle cell crisis
- Extrahepatic cholestasis: HIV cholangiopathy, choledocholithiasis, tumours, PSC, pancreatitis, strictures
- Some parasites: Ascaris lumbricoides, liver flukes
- Hepatocellular injury
- Defects in canalicular extretion or sinusoidal re-uptake: Dubin-Johnson syndrome, Rotor syndrome
Clinical Manifestations
- Can be seen in the sclera (scleral icterus) earliest, then skin
- Skin can take on a greenish hue over time, due to accumulation of biliverdin
Differential Diagnosis
- Carotenoderma, yellowing of the skin which spares the sclerae and is caused by excessive intake of carotene-rich foods