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Jaundice is defined as a serum bilirubin level above 19 µmol/L
Clinical jaundice manifests only when the bilirubin exceeds 50 µmol/L
Jaundice is difficult to detect visually below 85 µmol/L if lighting is poor
The most common causes recorded in a general practice population are (in order) viral hepatitis, gallstones, carcinoma of pancreas, cirrhosis, pancreatitis and drugs
Always take a full travel, drug and hepatitis contact history in any patient presenting with jaundice
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Red flags for jaundice: unexplained weight loss, progressive jaundice (incl. painless jaundice), cerebral dysfunction, e.g. confusion, somnolence.
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Associated symptoms (e.g. rash, pruritus, fever, arthralgia, weight loss)
Medical history
Contact with people with hepatitis or jaundice
Overseas travel, family history, drug history, IV drug use, sexual history, occupational history
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General inspection including skin for signs of excoriation.
The abdominal examination is important with a focus on the liver and spleen.
Look for signs of chronic liver disease.
Test for hepatitis flap (asterixis) and fetor, which indicate liver failure.
Include dipstick urine testing for bilirubin and urobilinogen.
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The main ones are the standard LFTs and viral serology for infective causes (hepatitis A, B, C and possibly EBV).
Consider hepatobiliary imaging, autoantibodies for autoimmune chronic active hepatitis and primary biliary cirrhosis, tumour markers and iron studies.
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INFECTIVE VIRAL HEPATITIS
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Hepatitis 298–302
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Hepatitis A, B, C common, esp. B and C
A and E—faeco–oral transmission
B, C, D—from IV drugs and bodily fluids
Sexual transmission with B and C
Diagnosed by ...