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jaundice

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jaundice

yellowing of the skin and whites of the eyes due to the abnormal presence of bile pigments in the blood, as in hepatitis
Collins Discovery Encyclopedia, 1st edition © HarperCollins Publishers 2005

jaundice

[′jȯn·dəs]
(invertebrate zoology)
(medicine)
Yellow coloration of the skin, mucous membranes, and secretions resulting from hyperbile-rubinemia. Also known as icterus.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
The following article is from The Great Soviet Encyclopedia (1979). It might be outdated or ideologically biased.

Jaundice

 

a yellow coloring of the body tissues in man, as a result of excess accumulation in the blood of the bile pigment bilirubin and of its metabolic products. Several types of jaun-dice are discerned, according to the mechanism of its origin—prehepatic and posthepatic.

Prehepatic jaundice is caused by an increased content of free bilirubin circulating in the blood, formed as a result of increased decomposition of the erythrocytes (hemolytic jaundice), or of congenital or acquired deficiency of enzymes that participate in binding bilirubin with glucuronic acid. Hemolytic jaundice appears in hemolytic disease of the new-born and in poisoning with hemolytic toxins; it is characterized by increased excretion of the products of bilirubin metabolism in the urine (urobilin) and feces (stercobilin, which causes the saturated pigmentation of the feces). Other types of jaundice caused by disruption in the capture and bonding of bilirubin and proceeding without substantive affection of liver cells are physiological jaundice of the new-born, nuclear jaundice, and juvenile jaundice. Hepatogenic jaundice (parenchymatous jaundice) is a function of organic (infectious, parasitic, or toxic) affection of the liver itself and is conditioned by the formation of an anastomosis between blood and bile capillaries and also by intrahepatic stasis of bile during inflammations of the liver. There appear, along with other symptoms of liver affection, a saturated pigmentation of the urine and faintly colored feces.

Posthepatic, or mechanical, jaundice develops due to disruption of the patency of the bile ducts, as a result of their stenosis or obstruction or from external pressure, and is manifested by the complete absence of stercobilin in the feces (colorless stools); it sometimes appears as a result of spasm of the sphincter at the point of influx of the bile duct into the duodenum. Pure forms of jaundice are not ordinarily found: in hemolytic jaundice, a mechanical component is added due to concentration of the bile and obstruction of the bile path-ways; affection of the liver cells is added to mechanical jaun-dice and it acquires some features of hepatogenic jaundice. As a result of the increased blood content of the bile components, jaundice is accompanied by itching, which is sometimes extremely distressing. In complete mechanical jaun-dice, there is disruption of the intestinal digestion and of fat and vitamin absorption, and the body is depleted of lime.

In a number of instances, a yellow coloring of the skin and other body tissues may be caused by pigments in food (for example, the carotene contained in carrots) or medications (acrichin).

REFERENCES

Bondar’, Z. A.Zheltukhi. Moscow, 1965.
Bondar’, Z. A. Klinicheskaia gepatologiia. Moscow, 1970.

A. S. MUKHIN

The Great Soviet Encyclopedia, 3rd Edition (1970-1979). © 2010 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive
Surgical experience of deeply jaundiced patients with bile duct obstruction.
Visibly jaundiced infants more than 24 hours old should have bilirubin levels measured and recorded within hours of the jaundice being detected (NICE, 2010).
Abdominal US is the initial imaging test of choice in jaundiced patients because it is non-invasive, inexpensive and readily available.
A nurse discovered that sunlight could do for infants what their liver could not, and since the 1970s, jaundiced newborns in the hospital have been placed naked under fluorescent light until the level of bilirubin in their blood dropped to safe levels.
Incidence of UTI in asymptomatic, afebrile, jaundiced infants younger than 8 weeks age was reported as 7.5%4 in one study from USA.
Some studies suggest that the ability of physicians and nurses to estimate serum bilirubin levels clinically is no better than guesswork9, whereas others have shown that newborns whose TSB levels exceed 12 mg/dl will, at least, always be identified as "jaundiced"8.
Babies visibly jaundiced at birth require a serum bilirubin level to be undertaken within two hours and an urgent medical review.
The clinical evaluation of jaundiced infants is an unreliable way to estimate total serum bilirubin.
It's time to give our jaundiced eyes a rest and begin to listen to what new mothers want.
Shattuck reported that using transcutaneous bilirubin testing on jaundiced term newborns increased hospital charges for bilirubin testing but ultimately lowered overall costs by decreasing the number of readmissions for hyperbilirubinemia.
Our calculations indicate that the presence of the Gilbert genotype reduces the risk of harmful disease in the jaundiced individual but cannot rule it out.
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