Unit Converter
Bilirubin, Total
(TBil – Total Bilirubin – Combined Direct + Indirect Bilirubin)
Synonyms
- Total bilirubin
- TBil
- Serum bilirubin
- Conjugated + unconjugated bilirubin
- Direct + indirect bilirubin
- Total serum bile pigments
Units of Measurement
- mmol/L
- µmol/L
- mg/dL
- mg/100 mL
- mg%
- mg/L
- µg/mL
Description
Total bilirubin measures the sum of:
- Unconjugated (indirect) bilirubin
- Water-insoluble
- Bound to albumin
- Formed from hemoglobin breakdown
- Water-insoluble
- Conjugated (direct) bilirubin
- Water-soluble
- Formed in liver via UGT1A1 enzyme
- Excreted into bile
- Water-soluble
Total bilirubin reflects:
- Hemolysis
- Liver conjugation ability
- Bile excretion
It is one of the most important liver function parameters.
Physiological Production
Daily bilirubin production:
- 80–85% from senescent RBC breakdown
- 10–15% from ineffective erythropoiesis
- <5% from muscle/myoglobin/heme enzymes
Hepatocytes conjugate bilirubin with glucuronic acid → excretion into bile.
Clinical Significance
Elevated Total Bilirubin
1. Pre-hepatic (Hemolytic) Causes
↑ production → unconjugated bilirubin predominant
- Hemolytic anemias
- Autoimmune hemolysis
- G6PD deficiency
- Sickle cell disease
- Thalassemia
- Ineffective erythropoiesis (B12/folate deficiency)
2. Hepatic Causes
Both direct & indirect may rise
- Viral hepatitis
- Alcoholic hepatitis
- NASH / NAFLD
- Drug-induced liver injury (DILI)
- Cirrhosis
- Wilson disease
- Crigler–Najjar (UGT1A1 deficiency)
3. Post-hepatic (Obstructive) Causes
Direct bilirubin predominant
- Gallstones
- Biliary strictures
- Pancreatic cancer
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis
- Primary biliary cholangitis
- Cholestasis of pregnancy
4. Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia
- Physiologic jaundice
- Breastfeeding jaundice
- UGT1A1 immaturity
- Hemolytic disease of newborn (HDN)
- Biliary atresia → direct bilirubin elevation
Low Total Bilirubin
Not significant clinically.
Rarely seen in:
- Severe oxidative stress
- Certain medications
- Hypoalbuminemia
Reference Intervals
(Tietz 8E + IFCC + AASLD + Mayo/ARUP)
Adults
- 0.3 – 1.2 mg/dL
- 5 – 21 µmol/L
Neonates
- Day 1: < 6 mg/dL
- Day 2: < 8 mg/dL
- Day 3–5: < 12 mg/dL
- 15 mg/dL → concerning
- Direct bilirubin > 1 mg/dL → always abnormal
Clinically Significant Levels
- > 2–3 mg/dL → visible jaundice
- > 20–25 mg/dL (neonates) → risk of kernicterus
- > 30 mg/dL (adults) → severe hepatobiliary disease
Unit Meanings
| Unit | Explanation |
| mmol/L | millimole per liter |
| µmol/L | micromole per liter |
| mg/dL | milligram per deciliter |
| mg% | mg per 100 mL |
| mg/100 mL | identical to mg% |
| mg/L | milligram per liter |
| µg/mL | microgram per milliliter |
Diagnostic Uses
1. Jaundice Evaluation
Differentiate:
- Hemolysis (indirect)
- Hepatocellular disease (mixed)
- Obstruction (direct)
2. Liver Function Assessment
Part of:
- LFT panel
- Cirrhosis monitoring
- Viral hepatitis management
- Drug hepatotoxicity evaluation
3. Neonatal Hyperbilirubinemia
Essential for:
- Phototherapy decisions
- Exchange transfusion threshold
- Early detection of biliary atresia (direct bilirubin)
4. Hemolysis Workup
Indirect bilirubin rises before anemia develops.
Analytical Notes
- Light-sensitive → protect sample from light.
- Lipemia may slightly increase results.
- Hemolysis does not affect bilirubin significantly.
- Use serum or heparinized plasma.
- Methods: Jendrassik–Grof diazo reaction (gold standard).
Clinical Pearls
- Direct vs indirect bilirubin pattern is key to diagnosis.
- Isolated unconjugated elevation → hemolysis, Gilbert syndrome.
- Predominant direct bilirubin elevation → cholestasis/obstruction.
- Very high bilirubin with AST/ALT <200 → consider sepsis-related cholestasis.
- Kernicterus risk increases dramatically when unconjugated bilirubin >20 mg/dL in neonates.
Interesting Fact
Because bilirubin is an antioxidant, very mild elevation (e.g., Gilbert syndrome) may be protective against cardiovascular disease.
References
- Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Bilirubin & Liver Function.
- IFCC Bilirubin Standardization.
- AASLD Guidelines - Jaundice & Cholestatic Disease.
- Mayo Clinic Laboratories - Total Bilirubin.
- ARUP Consult - Hyperbilirubinemia Diagnosis.
- MedlinePlus / NIH - Bilirubin Testing.
- Neonatal Jaundice Guidelines - AAP & Pediatric Hepatology Texts.
