Jaundice Flashcards

1
Q

What is jaundice

A

Accumulation of bilirubin in the skin giving a yellow/orange pigmentation and a significant itch

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2
Q

Where is jaundice most noticeable

A

The sclera of the eye

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3
Q

How are patients with jaundice described to look

A

Icteric

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4
Q

How does bilirubin affect the circulation of haem

A

Haem from RBCs being reprocessed is converted into biliverdin and then into bilirubin which allows the circulation of haem

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5
Q

Describe how bile is formed

A

Haem converted into bilibverdin then bilirubin has to be conjugated and from that bilirubin is excreted from the liver cells into the biliary tree forming bile

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6
Q

What is the purpose of the gall bladder

A

It can store bilirubin or it can contract and squeeze the bilirubin into the small intestine through the biliary duct

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7
Q

What happens to bile after it is secreted into the small intestine

A

Conjugated bilirubin is passed down to the large intestine where it is reabsorbed, converted to urobilinogen which can be excreted through the kidneys, giving urine its colour

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8
Q

What is the role of urobilinogen

A

Can be excreted through the kidneys but some will pass through the stool and give stercobilin - the colour pigment for the stool
Some urobilinogen is reabsorbed into the liver and reprocessed

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9
Q

What are the different classifications of jaundice

A

Pre-hepatic
Hepatic
Post-hepatic

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10
Q

Describe pre-hepatic jaundice

A

Excess of bilirubin being processed and passed into the bile duct
More conjugated bilirubin being produced and still more bilirubin in the blood which can’t be conjugated and therefore will accumulate in the blood and skin causing jaundice but not affecting the urine or stool colours

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11
Q

What are common causes of pre-hepatic jaundice

A

Haemolytic anaemia
Post transfusion - bad match
Neonatal (maternal RBC induced)

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12
Q

Describe hepatic jaundice

A

Problem with hepatic cell therefore the unconjugated bilirubin isn’t conjugated in the liver cell
No conjugated bilirubin is passed into the biliary system and no conjugated bilirubin is passed into the blood

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13
Q

What are the signs of hepatic jaundice

A

No pigment in the stool - it will be pale

No pigment in the urine because unconjugated bilirubin can’t be passed to the kindney

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14
Q

Describe post-hepatic jaundice

A

Conjugated bilirubin being passed into the bile system but a blockage causing this to flow back through the hepatic cells and into the blood

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15
Q

What are the signs of post-hepatic jaundice

A

No pigment passing to the stools - pale stools

An excess of pigment in the blood, passing to the urine causing dark urine

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16
Q

What are the common causes of blockage in post-hepatic jaundice

A

Intrahepatic - primary biliary sclerosis is an autoimmune disease destroying the bile tree and its pathways
Extrahepatic - biliary system can be blocked by either gallstones or tumours

17
Q

When is bile secreted from the gall bladder

A

Food entering the duodenum will cause a reflex contraction of the gall bladder releasing bile from the common bile duct to enter the duodenum from the ampulla

18
Q

What is cholecystitis and what will this cause

A

Inflammation of the gall bladder
Because the gall bladder sits against the diaphragm, at the bottom and behind the liver, it will cause inflammation of the diaphragm

19
Q

What are the symptoms of cholecystitis

A

Referred pain in shoulder tip
Abdominal pain in right side radiating to the back
Pain from eating fatty foods - stimulates bile release
Usually gallstones - rarely cholangiocarcinoma

20
Q

What investigations can be carried out on patients with jaundice

A

Ultrasound - detects dilated bile channels within the liver and biliary tree
Plain radiographs - can be used to see small vessels within the liver that can’t be seen in an ultrasound
ERCP

21
Q

What is an ERCP

A

Endoscopic Retrograde Cholangio Pancreatography
Best way to illuminate the biliary system and also allows the possibility of carrying out procedures to the biliary duct eg - stented ampulla

22
Q

How is ERCP carried out

A

Using an endoscope to put a cannula into the biliary tree from the duodenum
From that, dye is injected that goes towards the pancreatic system and upwards towards the liver where it branches forming the biliary tree to the hepatic cells

23
Q

What tumours may cause an obstruction leading to jaundice

A

Cholangiocarcinoma - can arise anywhere in the biliary system
Pancreatic cancer - head of the pancreas

24
Q

Give examples of common pancreatic diseases

A

Pancreatitis

Cystic fibrosis

25
Q

How is pre-hepatic jaundice managed

A

Identify and treat the cause

26
Q

How is post-hepatic jaundice managed

A

Remove obstruction:
Gall stones via ERCP
Force open channel with a stent

27
Q

How else can jaundice be managed

A

Prevention of gall stone recurrence by removing the gall bladder (cholecystectomy)
Prevent build up of bile acid with a low calorie, low cholesterol diet
Prevent bile acid reabsorption from the GIT

28
Q

What is neonatal jaundice

A

Pre-hepatic jaundice caused by an increased haem breakdown associated with a combination of birth trauma and ABO rhesus incompatibility from maternal and foetal blood mixing during delivery

29
Q

Why does the baby become jaundiced in neonatal jaundice

A

Ability for baby’s liver to process increased haem load and to produce conjugated bilirubin is reduced therefore unconjugated bilirubin accumulates in the circulation

30
Q

Why is neonatal jaundice especially dangerous

A

The baby’s blood brain barrier is not yet fully established so the unconjugated bilirubin may pass into the brain causing damage

31
Q

What is it called when there is accumulation of bilirubin in the brain

A

Kernicterus

32
Q

How is neonatal jaundice treated

A

Phototherapy - blue light applied to the skin will cause the bilirubin to breakdown so it can pass out through the kidneys
Sunlight contains the same blue light wavelengths so will do the same job