Jaundice can affect people of all ages, but its prevalence varies based on underlying causes such as liver diseases, infections, or genetic disorders. In newborns, it's quite common, with about 60% of babies developing some form of jaundice in the first week of life. Overall, millions of individuals worldwide are affected by jaundice annually, but exact numbers can fluctuate based on region and health conditions.
liver
liver
jaundiced - affected by jaundice which causes yellowing of skin etc canaries are yellow therefore canaries have jaundice i like pie and purple is a fruit
Jaundice at birth, often due to conditions like neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, is not contagious and cannot be transmitted from the affected person to others. It results from the baby's immature liver function and the breakdown of red blood cells, not from an infectious agent. Therefore, there is no risk of spreading jaundice to others.
Jaundice effects primarily the liver; diabetes effects all organs as well as muscle & nerve tissue.
People with Malaria often have Jaundice because the destruction of the red blood cells that Malaria cause's can cause Jaundice.
Liver failure (typically "Acute Liver Failure"), and Pancreatic Cancer causes Jaundice, a Yellowing of the skin or of the whites of the eyes more correctly called conjunctival icterus.
how many people were affected
thousands of people are affected
No, jaundice is one of the complications that some people get with yellow fever. Not everybody who gets yellow fiver gets jaundice.
how many people are affected by MS (multiple sclerosis)
1 out of 4 people are affected