How to distinguish physiological jaundice from pathological jaundice in babies

Basically, all children may have jaundice, because when we are in the mother's body, in fact, in a state of hypoxia, it supplies blood through the placenta, the concentration of hemoglobin in the fetus is high, and it is fetal hemoglobin, the life span of red blood cells is relatively short, so the destruction of red blood cells after birth increases significantly, and it will appear a neonatal physiological jaundice, which is called a pathological jaundice when it exceeds our normal range.

Therefore, in the case of neonatal jaundice, it is related to the number of days you are born, for example, the first day of the child, no more than six milligrams per deciliter, the second day no more than nine milligrams per deciliter, the third day does not exceed 12, and after more than 72 hours, it does not exceed 15 milligrams per deciliter, we are called physiological jaundice, and in the case of more than these values, we are commonly known as pathological jaundice, so pathological jaundice is good for diagnosing pathological jaundice, physiological jaundice is good, one depends on the number of days of birth of the child, Even the number of hours a child is born, if the child starts to develop jaundice two or three hours after birth, the child can basically be considered hemolysis.

If the child is 1 month old and has 10 milligrams per deciliter of jaundice, he is also a pathological jaundice, so the general physiological jaundice is 2 to 3 days to appear 3 to 5 days of the heaviest, 7 to 10 days to disappear, generally no more than two weeks.

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