The Measurement of Bilirubin Fractions in Serum
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Reviews in Clinical Laboratory Sciences
- Vol. 28 (5-6) , 415-445
- https://doi.org/10.3109/10408369109106872
Abstract
Bilirubin fractions are measured by (1) the direct diazo reaction, (2) high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC), (3) direct spectrophotometry, and (4) enzymatic methods. HPLC, which effects separation and quantitation of the four bilirubin fractions, is the method of choice, but impractical for routine use. A special application of direct spectrophotometry allows the measurement of unconjugated bilirubin and the sum of bilirubin conjugates. This approach, which provides essentially the same information as HPLC, unfortunately is available only in one clinical analyzer. The direct diazo reaction measures bilirubin conjugates plus δ-bilirubin, albeit not very accurately. Direct diazo methods that measure unconjugated bilirubin as direct could obscure the clinical diagnosis. At acid pH, enzymatic methods measure all direct reacting bilirubins, while at pH 10 only conjugated bilirubins are measured. Because the measurement of conjugated bilirubins is clearly more helpful than that of direct bilirubin in the differential diagnosis of jaundice, direct diazo methods should be replaced by methods specific for bilirubin conjugates.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Irreversible binding of conjugated bilirubin to albumin in cholestatic rats.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1984
- Measurement of serum bilirubin and its mono- and diconjugates: application to patients with hepatobiliary disease.Gut, 1982
- Blue Light and Bilirubin ExcretionScience, 1980
- Structure of bilirubinNature, 1976
- Bilirubin conjugates in bile of man and rat in the normal state and in liver diseaseJournal of Clinical Investigation, 1972
- Commercial bilirubin: A trinity of isomersFEBS Letters, 1971
- Structure of BilirubinNature, 1963
- Factors Affecting the Rate of Coupling of Bilirubin and Conjugated Bilirubin in the van den Bergh ReactionJournal of Clinical Pathology, 1958
- Properties and Composition of the Bile Pigment giving a Direct Diazo ReactionNature, 1956
- Di- and Mono-Taurobilirubin similar to a Directly Reacting Form of Bilirubin in SerumNature, 1956