Pediatrics

👶 Neonatal Jaundice - Part 1

A Comprehensive Article

Common Pediatric Diseases and Disorders

Neonatal jaundice affects up to 60% of term newborns and is usually benign, but severe cases can cause permanent brain damage. Understanding the distinction between physiologic and pathologic jaundice is crucial for appropriate management.

🔄 Bilirubin Metabolism: The Physiology

🔄 Why Newborns Turn Yellow

Jaundice is the yellow discoloration of skin and sclera caused by elevated bilirubin levels, visible when total serum bilirubin exceeds 5-7 mg/dL.

Normal Bilirubin Pathway

  • RBC Breakdown: Hemoglobin → heme → biliverdin → unconjugated bilirubin
  • Liver Processing: UGT enzyme conjugates bilirubin → conjugated bilirubin
  • Excretion: Conjugated bilirubin → bile → intestine → stool
  • Enterohepatic Circulation: Some bilirubin reabsorbed from intestine

Why Newborns Are Prone

  • Higher RBC turnover: Shorter RBC lifespan (70-90 days vs 120 in adults)
  • Immature liver: Lower UGT enzyme activity (especially first week)
  • Increased enterohepatic circulation: Sterile gut, slower motility
  • Lower albumin levels: Less bilirubin binding capacity
  • Delayed feeding: Less stool output, more reabsorption

🎯 Key Physiological Differences

Newborns have a "perfect storm" of factors that predispose them to jaundice: more bilirubin production from shorter-lived RBCs, less efficient liver processing due to immature enzymes, and increased reabsorption from the gut. This combination makes jaundice extremely common but usually self-limited.

🔄 Types of Jaundice

🔄 Physiologic vs Pathologic Jaundice

Distinguishing between normal physiologic jaundice and pathological jaundice requiring intervention is fundamental to newborn care.

Feature Physiologic Jaundice Pathologic Jaundice
Onset After 24 hours (typically day 2-3) Within first 24 hours
Peak Day 3-5 (term), Day 5-7 (preterm) Variable, often rapid rise
Resolution By 1-2 weeks (term) Persists beyond 2 weeks
Bilirubin Type Unconjugated Unconjugated or conjugated
Clinical Status Well-appearing baby May have other symptoms
Treatment None if below thresholds Often requires intervention
Clinical pearl: "Jaundice in the first 24 hours is always pathologic and requires immediate evaluation." This is the most important red flag for identifying newborns at risk for severe hyperbilirubinemia.

⚠️ Causes of Pathologic Jaundice

⚠️ Unconjugated Hyperbilirubinemia

Pathologic jaundice with elevated indirect bilirubin can result from increased production, decreased clearance, or increased enterohepatic circulation.

Increased Production (Hemolysis)

  • ABO Incompatibility: Mother O, baby A/B - most common hemolytic cause
  • Rh Incompatibility: Mother Rh-, baby Rh+ - severe but preventable
  • G6PD Deficiency: X-linked, oxidative stress triggers hemolysis
  • Hereditary Spherocytosis: RBC membrane defect
  • Other: Minor blood groups, infection, birth trauma

Decreased Clearance & Other Causes

  • Crigler-Najjar Syndrome: Complete/partial UGT deficiency
  • Gilbert Syndrome: Mild UGT deficiency (presents later)
  • Breastfeeding Jaundice: Inadequate intake first week
  • Breast Milk Jaundice: After first week, benign persistence
  • Other: Polycythemia, hypothyroidism, pyloric stenosis

🚨 Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia - ALWAYS PATHOLOGIC!

Direct bilirubin >1 mg/dL or >20% of total requires urgent evaluation for:

  • Biliary Atresia: Surgical emergency - Kasai procedure before 60 days
  • Neonatal Hepatitis: TORCH infections, metabolic disorders
  • Choledochal Cyst: Congenital cystic dilation
  • Sepsis: Can cause direct hyperbilirubinemia
  • TPN Cholestasis: Prolonged IV nutrition in preterms

Red Flag: Pale/acholic stools + dark urine + jaundice = Biliary atresia until proven otherwise!

👀 Clinical Presentation and Assessment

👀 Recognizing and Evaluating Jaundice

Proper assessment involves visual inspection, understanding progression patterns, and identifying risk factors for severe hyperbilirubinemia.

Cephalocaudal Progression

  • Zone 1 (face): ~5 mg/dL
  • Zone 2 (upper trunk): ~10 mg/dL
  • Zone 3 (lower trunk, thighs): ~12 mg/dL
  • Zone 4 (arms, legs below knees): ~15 mg/dL
  • Zone 5 (palms, soles): >15 mg/dL
Important: Visual assessment is unreliable for determining bilirubin level! Always measure if concerned.

Risk Factors for Severe Hyperbilirubinemia

  • Jaundice in first 24 hours
  • Blood group incompatibility (positive DAT)
  • G6PD deficiency
  • Prematurity (<38 weeks)
  • Previous sibling with phototherapy
  • Cephalohematoma or bruising
  • Exclusive breastfeeding (especially if not going well)
  • East Asian ethnicity

Diagnostic Approach

  • Transcutaneous Bilirubin (TcB): Non-invasive screening, correlates well up to ~15 mg/dL
  • Total Serum Bilirubin (TSB): Gold standard, includes fractionation
  • When to Measure: Jaundice in first 24 hours, excessive appearance, risk factors present, pre-discharge screening
  • Additional Tests if Pathologic: Direct bilirubin, blood type and Coombs, CBC with smear, G6PD level, sepsis workup if ill-appearing

Universal Screening Recommendation

The AAP recommends universal bilirubin measurement before discharge with risk assessment using hour-specific nomograms (Bhutani curve). This identifies infants at high risk who need close follow-up.

🔑 High-Yield Summary - Part 1

Concept Key Points Clinical Implications
Physiologic Jaundice Onset >24h, peaks day 3-5, resolves by 2 weeks Normal, requires no treatment if below thresholds
Pathologic Jaundice Onset <24h, rapid rise, persists >2 weeks Requires evaluation and often intervention
Conjugated Hyperbilirubinemia Direct >1 mg/dL or >20% of total ALWAYS PATHOLOGIC - urgent evaluation needed
Risk Factors Early onset, prematurity, hemolysis, breastfeeding difficulties Identify high-risk infants for close monitoring
ABO Incompatibility Mother O, baby A/B, positive DAT Most common hemolytic cause in developed countries

🎯 Key Takeaways - Part 1

  • Jaundice affects 60% of term newborns but is usually physiologic and self-limited
  • Newborns are prone to jaundice due to increased production, decreased clearance, and increased enterohepatic circulation of bilirubin
  • Jaundice in the first 24 hours is ALWAYS pathologic and requires immediate evaluation
  • Conjugated hyperbilirubinemia is ALWAYS pathologic and requires urgent workup
  • Visual assessment of jaundice is unreliable - always measure bilirubin if concerned
  • Universal pre-discharge bilirubin screening helps identify infants at risk for severe hyperbilirubinemia
  • Breastfeeding should be supported and encouraged, not restricted, in jaundiced infants