Gastrointestinal System Disorders: Anna Marie M. Ventulan, MD, DPPS, DPSNBM
Gastrointestinal System Disorders: Anna Marie M. Ventulan, MD, DPPS, DPSNBM
Gastrointestinal System Disorders: Anna Marie M. Ventulan, MD, DPPS, DPSNBM
Disorders
biliverdin
reabsorbed in small
Cis-bilirubin + albumin
intestine
enters hepatocyte
UDPGT
B-glucuronidase
Bilirubin + glucuronic acid
urobilinogen excreted
1
Indirect Serum Bilirubin Concentration
and Its Relation To The Progression
of Dermal Icterus in Full-Term Infants*
2
Bilirubin (mg/100 mL)
Dermal
Zone Mean ± SD Range Observations
4
*Includes all infants whose rate of serum bilirubin rise was 0.7
mg/dL/h or less.
5
Dermal Zones of Jaundice
Kramer’s Classification
(Cephalopedal Progression)
Zone Jaundiced Areas Serum Bilirubin
(mg/dl)
I Head/Neck 6-8
IV Arms/Legs/Elbows/Knees 15-18
V Hands/Feet >18
Unconjugated Hyperbilirubinemia
caused by factors that:
1. increases the load of bilirubin to be
metabolized by the liver (hemolysis,
hemorrhage, polycythemia, shortened RBC
survival, infection, increase enterohepatic
circulation)
2. damages or reduces the activity of the
transferase enzyme or other related enzymes
(genetic, hypoxia, thyroid deficiency)
3. competes for or blocks the transferase
enzyme (drugs and other substances requiring
glucuronic acid conjugation)
• Bilirubin encephalopathy
• Chronic, permanent clinical sequelae of
bilirubin toxicity
• Resulting from deposits of unconjugated
bilirubin within the brain.
• Visualized as yellow staining of basal ganglia,
hippocampus, geniculate bodies, brain stem
nuclei and cerebellum
• Causing neuronal necrosis
• Bilirubin levels at which kernicterus occurs
vary depending on the presence of hemolytic
disease and gestational age
• No “safe” levels of bilirubin have been
identified
• Thought to be highly preventable in most
cases
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
• Signs and symptoms of kernicterus usually appear 2-
5 days after birth in term infants and as late as the
7th day in preterm infants
• Hyperbilirubinemia may lead to encephalopathy at
any time during the neonatal period
• Early signs may be subtle and indistinguishable from
those of sepsis, asphyxia, hypoglycemia, intracranial
hemorrhage, and other acute systemic illnesses in a
neonate.
• Lethargy, poor feeding, and loss of the Moro reflex
are common initial signs.
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
HEART DISEASE
CONGENITAL ACQUIRED
ACYANOTIC CYANOTIC
Approach to Congenital Heart Disease