Normal Serum Bilirubin Levels in the Newborn and the Effect of Breast-Feeding
- 1 November 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) in Pediatrics
- Vol. 78 (5), 837-843
- https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.78.5.837
Abstract
We measured the serum bilirubin concentrations in 2,416 consecutive infants admitted to our well-baby nursery. The maximum serum bilirubin concentration exceeded 12.9 mg/dL (221 µmol/L) in 147 infants (6.1%), and these infants were compared with 147 randomly selected control infants with maximum serum bilirubin levels ≤12.9 mg/dL. In 66 infants (44.9%), we identified an apparent cause for the jaundice, but in 81 (55%), no cause was found. Of infants for whom no cause for hyperbilirubinemia was found, 82.7% were breast-fed v 46.9% in the control group (P < .0001). Breast-feeding was significantly associated with hyperbilirubinemia, even in the first three days of life. The 95th percentile for bottle-fed infants is a serum bilirubin level of 11.4 mg/dL v 14.5 mg/dL for the breast-fed population, and the 97th percentiles are 12.4 and 14.8 mg/dL, respectively. Of the formula-fed infants, 2.24% had serum bilirubin levels >12.9 mg/dL v 8.97% of breast-fed infants (P < .000001). When compared with previous large studies, the incidence of "readily visibl" jundice (serum bilirubin level >8 mg/dL) appears to be increasing. The dramatic increase in breast-feeding in the United States in the last 25 years may explain this observation. There is a strong association between breast-feeding and jaundice in the healthy newborn infant. Investigations for the cause of hyperbilirubinemia in healthy breast-fed infants may not be indicated unless the serum bilirubin level exceeds approximately 15 mg/dL, whereas in the bottle-fed infant, such investigations may be indicated if the serum bilirubin exceeds approximately 12 mg/dL. If phototherapy is ever indicated in healthy term infants, the overwhelming majority of such infants are likely to be breast-fed; if breast-feeding is, indeed, the cause of such jaundice, a more appropriate approach to hyperbilirubinemia in the breast-fed infant might be to treat the cause (by temporary cessation of nursing) rather than (using phototherapy to treat) the effect.Keywords
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