Causes Of Jaundice Flashcards

1
Q

What is Jaundice?

A
  • Clinical manifestation of increased Bilirubin in blood

- Yellow tint to sclera and skin

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2
Q

How is Bilirubin made?

A
  • At spleen, RBC split into Haem and Globin

- Haem-> Biliverdin-> Unconjugated Bilirubin (Then binds to albumin)

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3
Q

The liver acts on Bilirubin conjugated to Albumin, to make it H2O soluble.

Where can the Bilirubin go?

A
  1. Enters Enterohepatic circulation going round in circles as bile
  2. Enter and stay in duodenum, becoming oxidised-> Stercobilin (Pigment that makes faeces brown)
  3. Enters bloodstream-> Kidney then excreted in urine as Urobilinogen
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4
Q

Compare the 3 classes of causes of jaundice

A
  1. Pre-Hepatic: Too much Haem-> Unconjugated bilirubin
  2. Hepatic: Reduced hepatocyte function
  3. Post-Hepatic: Obstruction of bile ducts, more common form of jaundice, Conjugated bilirubin accumulates
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5
Q

List 2 causes of Pre-Hepatic Jaundice

A
  • Haemoglobinopathies (Increased RBC breakdown)

- Haemolysis

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6
Q

Describe and list 2 causes of Hepatic Jaundice (reduced hepatocyte function)

A
  1. Reduced hepatocyte function
  2. Reduced conjugating ability-> Mix of Conjugated and Unconjugated bilirubin
  • Chronic Liver disease
  • Acute Liver damage
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7
Q

How do stools and urine appear in Post-Hepatic Jaundice?

Why?

A
  • Dark coloured urine
  • Pale coloured stools
  • Path to Gut is blocked so moe H2O-soluble conjugated Bilirubin goes to kidney to be excreted (as Urobilinogen)
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8
Q

What are 4 causes of Post-Hepatic Jaundice?

A
  • Gallstones in CBD
  • Biliary Tree stricture (Scarring, narrowing etc)
  • Enlargement of Head of Pancreas, which is painless (E.g Pancreatic Carcinoma)
  • Intrahepatic duct obstruction (Inflammation, Oedema, Cirrhosis, Tumour)
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