Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySophie Lawson Modified over 9 years ago
1
HYPERBILIRUBINEMIA Fatima C. Dela Cruz
2
Jaundice Yellowish discoloration of the skin, sclera and other mucous membranes of the body
3
Jaundice Accumulation in skin of unconjugated, non-polar, lipid-soluble bilirubin pigment formed from Hgb by the action of heme oxygenase, biliverdin reductase, & non-enzymatic reducing agents in the reticuloendothelial cells Deposition of the pigment after it has been converted in the liver cell microsome by the enzyme uridine diphosphoglucuronic acid (UDP)-glucuronyl transferase to the polar, water-soluble ester glucuronide of bilirubin (direct reacting)
4
Jaundice Face (total serum bilirubin ~ 5mg/dl) Midabdomen (TSB ~15 mg/dl) Feet (TSB ~20mg/dl)
5
Jaundice Dermal Zones of Jaundice (Kramer, 1969) Zone Range of TSB (mg/dL) 1 4.3 – 7.9 25.4 – 12.2 3 8.1 – 16.5 4 11.1 – 18.3 5 >15
6
Bilirubin Macrophages Bloodstream Liver Gut RBCs Heme Unconjugated Unconjugated bilirubin- Conjugated Urobilinogen bilirubin albumin complex bilirubin ----------------------- Albumin Indirect Bilirubin Direct bilirubin Uridine Glucuronyl transferase 80% -feces 20% 10%-urine 90%-liver
7
Jaundice Unconjugated hyperbilirubinemia is bright yellow or orange Direct hyperbilirunemia is greenish or muddy yellow
8
Differential Diagnoses Jaundice appearing at birth <24 hours Sepsis Erythroblastosis fetalis Concealed hemorrhage Cytomegalic inclusion disease Rubella Congenital toxoplasmosis
9
Differential Diagnoses Jaundice appearing on the 2nd or 3rd day Physiologic hyperbilirubinemia of the newborn Criggler-Najjar syndrome (familial nonhemolytic icterus)
10
Differential Diagnoses Jaundice appearing after the 3rd day, within the 1st week Septicemia Syphilis Toxoplasmosis Cytomegalic inclusion disease Other causes of early jaundice (Intrauterine transfusions, Extensive ecchymosis or hematomas, Polycythemia)
11
Differential Diagnoses Jaundice appearing after the 1st week Breast milk jaundice Septicemia Congenital atresia of the bile ducts Hepatitis Rubella Galactosemia, hypothyroidism Spherocytosis (congenital hemolytic anemia) Other hemolytic anemias (G6PD deficiency, Glutathione synthetase deficiency, Peroxidase deficiency, Pyruvate kinase deficiency)
12
Physiologic Jaundice Result of increased bilirubin production following breakdown of fetal red blood cells and limitation of liver bilirubin conjugation Indirect bilirubin: 1-3 mg/dL; rises at a rate <5mg/dL/24h Usually visible by the 2nd-3rd day and disappears by the 5th-7th day
13
Pathologic Jaundice Jaundice appears in the first 24-36 h of life Total serum bilirubin (TSB) rises by > 5 mg/dL/day Serum bilirubin >12 mg/dL term and 10-14 mg/dL in preterm infants Jaundice persists after 10-14 days of life Direct-reacting bilirubin >2 mg/dL at any time
14
Pathologic Jaundice 1. Hemolytic disease Rh incompatibility ABO incompatibility Drugs (vitamin K) Congenital hypothyroidism Increased hemolysis Cephal hematoma 2. Hepatocellular injury Biliary atresia Cholestasis Hepatitis Infection 3. Mixed hemolytic and hepatotoxic factors Infection (bacterial and viral) 4. Hyperbilirubinemia secondary to metabolic factors Hypoxia Respiratory distress Hypoglycemia Hypothyroidism
15
Breastfeeding Jaundice bilirubin during the first week of life in breastfed infants due to both caloric and fluid deprivation Resolves with increased breast feeding frequency and amount of milk intake
16
Breastmilk Jaundice Jaundice among breastfed infants probably secondary to hormones (pregnanediol) in milk acting on infant’s hepatic metabolism and an enzyme (glucuronidase) facilitating intestinal reabsorption of bilirubin
17
Treatment Phototherapy Exchange transfusion Intravenous immunoglobulin Metalloporphyrins
18
Treatment Phototherapy Exposure to a high intensity of light in the visible spectrum Bilirubin absorbs light maximally in the blue range Photoisomerization converts unconjugated bilirubin (4Z, 15Z) into unconjugated isomer (4Z, 15E) which is excreted in the bile Structural change converts unconjugated bilirubin to lumirubin, which is excreted in the urine in an unconjugated state
19
Treatment Exchange transfusion Partial removal of the infant’s circulating antibody coated RBCs as well as unattached antibodies and replace
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.