• Arch Intern Med · May 1987

    Marked hyperbilirubinemia in infectious mononucleosis. Analysis of laboratory data in seven patients.

    • S A Fuhrman, R Gill, C A Horwitz, W Henle, G Henle, G Kravitz, J Baldwin, and J Tombers.
    • Arch Intern Med. 1987 May 1; 147 (5): 850-3.

    AbstractWhile mild to moderate hepatic dysfunction is commonly encountered in infectious mononucleosis induced by Epstein-Barr virus (EBV), clinical jaundice with high bilirubin levels (greater than or equal to 6.0 mg/dL [greater than or equal to 103 mumol/L] is only occasionally encountered. In this study, seven patients with primary EBV infections had peak bilirubin levels of 10.2 to 23.0 mg/dL (174 to 393 mumol/L) and, for the most part, presented initial diagnostic problems. Complications included the virus-associated hemophagocytic syndrome and acute respiratory distress syndrome in one patient and transient renal failure in another. The laboratory data suggested that a combination of hemolysis and viral-induced cholestasis was responsible for the intense hyperbilirubinemia in at least five patients. Physicians should be aware that marked hyperbilirubinemia can occur with EBV-induced infectious mononucleosis and, thereby, obviate the need for costly diagnostic laboratory tests and, occasionally, invasive procedures.

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