Obstructive jaundice Flashcards
What is jaundice?
clinically
Yellowing of the skin, usually visible when the bilirubin level reaches 50 micromol/L, with the upper limit of normal being 25 micromol/L
How is jaundice classified?
- Pre-hepatic
- Hepatocellular (Hepatic)
- Obstructive/cholestatic (Post-hepatic)
Describe the bilirubin metablism
(not an objective)
- When r.b.c reach the end of their life (120 days), they are destroyed in the reticuloendothelial system of the spleen
- The haem is converted to biliverdin and then to bilirubin (insoluble/indirect bilirubin), which is bound by albumin in the plasma
- Bilirubin can then be taken up by hepatocytes as it is protein bound, and it is conjugated by glucuronyl transferase to bilirubin glucuronide (solube/direct bilirubin)
- This soluble bilirubin is excreted in the bile into the bowel lumen, where it is transformed by bacteria to urobilinogen
- Most urobilinogen is excreted in the stools to give it the dark colour (aka stercobilinogen)
- A small amount of urobilinogn is reabsorbed from the intestine into the portal venous tributaries and passes back to the liver, wheremost of it is excreted once more into the gut
- Some of this reabsorbed urobilinogen reaches the systemic circulation, and this is excreted by the kidney into the urine
- When the urobilinogen in the urine is exposed to air, it is oxidized to urobilin to give urine a dark colour
What cause pre-hepatic jaundice?
- Occurs secondary to increased erytrocyte (RBC) breakdown
- Haemolytic anamias (sickle cell, G6PD deficiency, pyruvate, kinase deficiency, hereditary spherocytosis)
- Malaria
- Thalassaemias
- The bilirubn has not yet been processed by the liver, thus is mainly unconjugated in the blood
How is cholestatic (obstructive) jaundice classified? (what is it?)
Give the causes for each
Intra hepatic obstruction:
- Obstruction of the hepatic bile canniliculi (failure of bile secretion)
- Can occur secondary to multiple different causes:
- Hepatitis
- Cirrhosis
- Neoplasm
- Drugs
- Pregancy
Extra hepatic obstruction:
- Obstruction of the hepatic ducts, or biliary tree
- Causes within lumen:
- Gallstones
- Causes within the wall:
- Cholangiocarcinoma
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis
- Congenital atresia of the common bile duct
- External causes:
- Pancreatitis
- Tumour of pancreatic head
Why does cholestatic jaundice occur? (Give an overview)
- There is an obstruction to bile outflow from the liver, leading to ‘cholestasis’
What are the clinical features of obstructive jaundice?
Why do they occur?
- Jaundice of skin and sclera - high bilirubin
- Pruritus (itching) - bilirubin deposition
- Dark urine
- As the bilirubin has been processed by the liver, it is mainly conjugated in the blood, and thus can also enter the urine giving dark urine
- Pale stools
- The bilirubin cannot enter the GI tract and thus is not excreted in faeces, giving pale stools
- Steatorrhoea
- reduced fat soluble vitamin absorption
What investigations would you do for a patient presenting with obstruction jaundice?
(laboratory and radiological)
Urine and stools investigation:
- Very little bile can enter the gut, thus stercobilinogen low, giving pale stools
- As the bilirubin is conjugated in the blood, urinary bilirubin is present, giving dark urine
Bloods:
- FBC, reticulocytes, LFTs, U&Es, clotting, glucose, bilirubin levels
- Transaminases most raised in intrahepatic jaundice
- ALP most raised in extrahepatic cholestasis
- Glucose may be low in liver failure, or raised in pancreatic disease
Imaging:
- Ultrasound
- Will show dilated duct system to confirm obstruction
- Gallstones within the gall bladder can be demonstrated accurately
- MRCP
- Gives non-invasive high resolution imaging of the biliary tress