Publication | Closed Access
The Clinical Importance of a Protein-Bound Fraction of Serum Bilirubin in Patients with Hyperbilirubinemia
192
Citations
16
References
1983
Year
Total BilirubinRenal FunctionLaboratory HematologyHepatologyClinical ImportanceSerum BilirubinMedicineBiliary TractHematologyPathologyLaboratory MedicineBiliary DisorderAcute Liver FailureClinical ChemistryChronic Kidney DiseaseAlbumin-bound BilirubinProtein-bound Fraction
A directly reacting fraction of bilirubin that is probably covalently bound to albumin (albumin-bound bilirubin) has recently been described. To determine its clinical importance we used a new high-performance liquid-chromatography technique to measure it in the serum of 200 patients with hyperbilirubinemia from various causes. Albumin-bound bilirubin was an important fraction (8 to 90 per cent) of total bilirubin in patients with hepatocellular and cholestatic jaundice as well as in patients with the Dubin-Johnson syndrome. It was not detected in normal volunteers, neonates with physiologic jaundice, or patients with Gilbert's disease or hemolysis. Thus, albumin-bound bilirubin appears in serum when hepatic excretion of conjugated bilirubin is impaired. It becomes a larger component of serum bilirubin as jaundice subsides, delaying resolution of this disorder and causing bilirubin to persist in plasma after it has disappeared from the urine.
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