provides a comprehensive look at the who,
what, when and how of Jaundice
< b>Jaundice: Yellow staining of the skin and sclerae (the whites of the
eyes) by abnormally high blood levels of the bile pigment bilirubin. The yellowing
extends to other tissues and body fluids. Jaundice was once called the "morbus regius"
(the regal disease) in the belief that only the touch of a king could cure it.
When red blood cells are removed from the bloodstream, hemoglobin, the molecule
in red cells that carries oxygen, is broken down into bilirubin. The bilirubin is
carried to the liver and excreted into the intestine as a component of bile.
Jaundice can indicate liver or gallbladder disease. When the excretion of bilirubin
is hindered, excess bilirubin passes into the blood, resulting in jaundice. Inflammation
or other abnormalities of liver cells hinder the excretion of bilirubin into bile.
Or the bile ducts outside the liver may be blocked by a gallstone or a tumor. Jaundice
can also result from the excessive breakdown of red blood cells (a process called
hemolysis) and too much bilirubin is released into the bloodstream. This occurs
typically in the hemolytic anemias (as opposed to the aplastic anemias in which
not enough red cells are produced). Jaundice is common in newborns because there
is some hemolysis during labor and delivery and the newborn's liver is immature
and may not be fully up to the task of handling the bilirubin for a few days. In
Gilbert syndrome, the blood bilirubin levels are slightly increased, enough to cause
mild jaundice. This genetic condition is usually discovered serendipitously during
routine screening tests of liver function. It causes no symptoms and no problems.
The figurative use of "jaundice" in "to view things with a jaundiced eye" refers
to an attitude of distaste. This may reflect the distaste with which a jaundiced
person views food, since severe jaundice typically brings loss of appetite and feelings
nausea. "Jaundice" is often said to have come from the French "jaune" for yellow.
This is incorrect. The word "jaundice" stemmed from the Latin "galbinus" which described
a light greenish-yellow color. In Old French this became "jaunisse" and, in crossing
the English Channel, it became "jaundice." In French "jaundice" is still "jaunisse."
The term icterus is synonymous with jaundice. A person who is icteric is jaundiced.
Abnormally high blood bilirubin is termed hyperbilirubinemia.
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