Haematology:
- full blood count - may be anaemic due to malignancy
 - raised white count may indicate cholangitis or underlying malignancy
 - leucopaenia may occur in viral hepatitis
 - reticulocytosis indicates pre-hepatic jaundice
 - prothrombin time - prolonged in chronic liver disease; will return to normal in cholestasis following parenteral vitamin K, 10 mg
 
Biochemistry:
- serum transaminases - increased in hepatic jaundice and to a lesser degree, in extrahepatic jaundice
 - serum alkaline phosphatase - raised in extra-hepatic jaundice; hepatic origin confirmed by concomitant rise in gamma glutamyl transferase
 - serum bilirubin - confirms jaundice; used to monitor progress
 - serum albumin and globulin - little change in acute jaundice; albumin decreased and globulin increased in chronic hepatic jaundice
 
Urinalysis
Stools:
- pale stools in cholestasis
 - occult blood - suggests carcinoma
 
Abdominal ultrasound - assesses bile duct dilatation, liver size, liver metastases, portal blood flow, ascites, lymphadenopathy
Chest x-ray - to show primary or secondary tumours, and any irregularity or elevation of the right diaphragm due to enlarged or nodular liver