History
Important points in a history concerning jaundice include:
- duration of illness:
- short history, preceding nausea, anorexia - suggests hepatitis
- cholestatic jaundice develops slowly, usually with persistent pruritus
- pyrexia, fevers, rigors - suggests cholangitis associated with gallstones or biliary stricture
- family history - congenital hyperbilirubinaemia, hepatitis, gallstones
- recent community outbreak of jaundice - suggests hepatitis A
- recent consumption of shellfish - suggests hepatitis A
- note recent travel to areas where hepatitis is endemic
- male homosexuality, recent injections - intravenous drug abuse, blood tests, tuberculin testing - increased risk of hepatitis B
- recent blood or plasma transfusion - increased risk of hepatitis C in developed countries; of hepatitis B in developing countries
- alcohol consumption - may complain of morning nausea, anorexia, diarrhoea, right upper quadrant pain
- recent surgery:
- jaundice following biliary tract surgery may indicate residual calculi
- may be due to anaesthesia e.g. halothane
- rarely the patient may complain that everything has a yellow tinge - xanthopsia
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