Obstructive Jaundice Flashcards
What are the 2 main signs of jaundice and why?
- Yellow eyes
- yellow sclera —> 1st sign
- high in elastin —> high affinity for
bilirubin
- yellow sclera —> 1st sign
- Yellow skin
- over 2.5mg/dL serum bilirubin
+ pale stool, dark urine
How is bilirubin produced?
Red blood cells die (120 days) —> phagocytosed in
reticuloendothelial system (spleen + lymph nodes):
Hb —> heme —> iron
—> protoporphyrin —> unconjugated
bilirubin
—> globin —> amino acids
What is the difference between UCB and CB?
Unconjugated bilirubin:
- lipid-soluble —> not water-soluble —> binds to
albumin to be carried in blood (to hepatocytes for
conjugation)
- indirect bilirubin
Conjugated bilirubin:
- water-soluble
- via UGT (uridine glucuronyl transferase) in
hepatocytes
- secreted by liver to bile canaliculi —> bile ducts —>
gallbladder
What are the 3 steps of bilirubin being excreted in faeces?
- Food —> CB secreted by gallbladder —> small
intestine - CB to UBG (urobilinogen) by intestinal microbes
- UBG to stercobilin —> excreted in faeces
What are the … steps of bilirubin being excreted in urine?
- Food —> CB secreted by gallbladder —> small
intestine - CB to UBG (urobilinogen) by intestinal microbes
- UBG reabsorbed to blood —> UBG to urobilin via
oxidation - Urobilin —> most to liver
—> some to kidneys —> excreted in urine
What are 5 causes of increased UCB?
- Extravascular haemolytic anaemias
- RBCs broken down too early
- Ineffective haematopoiesis
- RBCs not formed correctly —> broken down
- Gilbert’s syndrome - genetic
- low UGT
- Crigler Najjar syndrome
- no UGT
- usually fatal ∵ UCB deposits in brain basal ganglia
—> kernicterus
- Newborn jaundice
- lower UGT + fetal RBC destruction
- treat: phototherapy (non-invasive)
What are the … causes of increased CB?
- Dubin-Johnson syndrome - genetic (auto rec)
- MRP2 deficiency —> use MRCP3 —> transports CB
to blood instead of bile canaliculus
- MRP2 deficiency —> use MRCP3 —> transports CB
- Obstructive jaundice
- bile flow blocked
What is obstructive jaundice?
Blockage of bile/pancreatic duct causing jaundice
What are … causes of obstructive jaundice?
- Tumours - Hilar cholangiocarcinoma
- Distal cholangiocarcinoma
- Head of pancreas carcinoma - Cancers - Gallbladder
- Duodenal
- Ampullary
- Malignant hilar lymphadenopathy - Diseases - Primary sclerosing cholangitis
- Chronic pancreatitis
- Hydatid cyst (helminth infection)
- Mirizzi’s syndrome - Other - CBD stones (common bile duct)
- Post cholecystectomy ischaemic CBD
stricture
What are 6 symptoms of obstructive jaundice?
- Pruritis = itchy skin
- bile contents deposit in skin - Hypercholesterolaemia - cholesterol in bile
- Xanthomas = yellow patch on skin
- lipid deposits in skin - Dark urine - excess urobilin through kidneys
- Steatorrhea - lose bile —> can’t digests fats
- Fat-soluble vit deficiencies - lose bile —> can’t
digests fats
What is a cause of increased UCB and CB?
Viral hepatitis:
Hepatocytes infected and die
—> less conjugation —> excess UCB
—> bile can leak out to blood —> excess CB
Which 2 blood tests are used to diagnose obstructive jaundice?
- Serum amylase
- Prothrombin time
Which 3 scans are done to diagnose obstructive jaundice?
- US —> first
- MRCP —> second
- CT —> final (to exclude other cause)
How are gallstones treated?
Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
= gallbladder removal (keyhole surgery)
- simultaneous CBD (common bile duct) exploration
- may discharge after ERCP —> book surgery later
Open cholecystectomy
- if keyhole surgery won’t work