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Jaundice, or icterus, is a yellowish discoloration of tissue resulting
from the deposition of bilirubin. Tissue deposition of bilirubin occurs
only in the presence of serum hyperbilirubinemia and is a sign of
either liver disease or, less often, a hemolytic disorder. The degree of
serum bilirubin elevation can be estimated by physical examination.
Slight increases in serum bilirubin are best detected by examining
the sclerae, which have a particular affinity for bilirubin due to their
high elastin content. The presence of scleral icterus indicates a serum
bilirubin of at least 51 μmol/L (3 mg/dL). The ability to detect scleral
icterus is made more difficult if the examining room has fluorescent
lighting. If the examiner suspects scleral icterus, a second place to
examine is underneath the tongue. As serum bilirubin levels rise, the
skin will eventually become yellow in light-skinned patients and even
green if the process is long-standing; the green color is produced by
oxidation of bilirubin to biliverdin.
The differential diagnosis for yellowing of the skin is limited. In
addition to jaundice, it includes carotenoderma, the use of the drug
quinacrine, and excessive exposure to phenols. Carotenoderma is
the yellow color imparted to the skin by the presence of carotene; it
occurs in healthy individuals who ingest excessive amounts of vegetables
and fruits that contain carotene, such as carrots, leafy vegetables,
squash, peaches, and oranges. Unlike jaundice, where the
yellow coloration of the skin is uniformly distributed over the body,
in carotenoderma, the pigment is concentrated on the palms, soles,
forehead, and nasolabial folds. Carotenoderma can be distinguished
from jaundice by the sparing of the sclerae. Quinacrine causes a
yellow discoloration of the skin in 4–37% of patients treated with it.
Unlike carotene, quinacrine can cause discoloration of the sclerae.
Another sensitive indicator of increased serum bilirubin is darkening
of the urine, which is due to the renal excretion of conjugated
bilirubin. Patients often describe their urine as tea- or cola-colored.
Bilirubinuria indicates an elevation of the direct serum bilirubin
fraction and, therefore, the presence of liver disease.
Increased serum bilirubin levels occur when an imbalance exists
between bilirubin production and clearance. A logical evaluation of
the patient who is jaundiced requires an understanding of bilirubin
production and metabolism.
MEASUREMENT OF SERUM BILIRUBIN
The terms direct and indirect bilirubin, conjugated and unconjugated
bilirubin, respectively, are based on the original van den
Bergh reaction. This assay, or a variation of it, is still used in most
clinical chemistry laboratories to determine the serum bilirubin
level. In this assay, bilirubin is exposed to diazotized sulfanilic acid,
splitting into two relatively stable dipyrrylmethene azopigments
that absorb maximally at 540 nm, allowing for photometric analysis.
The direct fraction is that which reacts with diazotized sulfanilic
acid in the absence of an accelerator substance such as alcohol. The
direct fraction provides an approximate determination of the conjugated
bilirubin in serum. The total serum bilirubin is the amount
that reacts after the addition of alcohol. The indirect fraction is the
difference between the total and the direct bilirubin and provides an
estimate of the unconjugated bilirubin in serum.
With the van den Bergh method, the normal serum bilirubin
concentration usually is 17 μmol/L (<1 mg/dL). Up to 30%, or 5.1
μmol/L (0.3 mg/dL), of the total may be direct-reacting (conjugated)
bilirubin. Total serum bilirubin concentrations are between 3.4 and
15.4 μmol/L (0.2 and 0.9 mg/dL) in 95% of a normal population
MEASUREMENT OF URINE
BILIRUBIN
Unconjugated bilirubin is always
bound to albumin in the serum, is
not filtered by the kidney, and is
not found in the urine. Conjugated
bilirubin is filtered at the glomerulus
and the majority is reabsorbed by the
proximal tubules; a small fraction is
excreted in the urine. Any bilirubin
found in the urine is conjugated bilirubin.
The presence of bilirubinuria
implies the presence of liver disease.
A urine dipstick test (Ictotest) gives
the same information as fractionation
of the serum bilirubin. This
test is very accurate. A false-negative
test is possible in patients with prolonged
cholestasis due to the predominance
of conjugated bilirubin
covalently bound to albumin
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