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Direct Bilirubin

Direct Bilirubin
Method: Diazo method (Jendrassik–Grof method)
(Conjugated Bilirubin)
Liquid reagent: R1: R2=3:1
(Conjugated Bilirubin)

Clinical Significance of Direct Bilirubin

Direct bilirubin is the conjugated form of bilirubin.
It is formed in the liver when unconjugated bilirubin combines with glucuronic acid (via UDP-glucuronyl transferase).

It is:

  • Water soluble
  • Excreted in bile
  • Measured directly by the diazo reaction

1️⃣ Obstructive (Post-Hepatic) Jaundice – Most Important


Markedly Increased in:

  • Gallstones
  • Carcinoma head of pancreas
  • Bile duct obstruction
  • Cholestasis

🔎 Mechanism:

  • Conjugated bilirubin cannot pass into intestine
  • Regurgitates back into bloodstream

👉 Findings:

  • ↑ Direct bilirubin
  • Dark urine (bilirubin present)
  • Pale/clay-colored stools
  • ↑ ALP

2️⃣ Hepatocellular Jaundice

Seen in:

  • Viral hepatitis
  • Cirrhosis
  • Drug-induced liver injury

🔎 Mechanism:

  • Liver conjugates bilirubin
  • But damaged hepatocytes fail to excrete it properly
  • Mixed increase (both direct and indirect)

3️⃣ Neonatal Cholestasis

  • Biliary atresia
  • Neonatal hepatitis

⚠ Direct hyperbilirubinemia in newborn is always pathological and needs evaluation.

4️⃣ Differentiation of Types of Jaundice

Type of Jaundice:
Hemolytic (Pre-hepatic) 
Obstructive (Post-hepatic) 


5️⃣ Urine Bilirubin

Since direct bilirubin is water-soluble:

  • It appears in urine
  • Causes dark-colored urine

Unconjugated bilirubin does NOT appear in urine.

Normal Value

Direct bilirubin: 0 – 0.3 mg/dL

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