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Yellow Eyes (Jaundice): Causes and When It Becomes an Emergency

Yellowing of the eyes and skin is a signal that should never be ignored. Here are the common causes of jaundice and the warning signs that mean you need help now.

Last updated: June 2026 11 min read Verified by Dr. Tank ★★★★★ Evidence-based
Yellow Eyes (Jaundice): Causes and When It Becomes an Emergency
Dr. Avinash Tank
Medically reviewed & authored by Dr. Avinash Tank MBBS · MS (General Surgery) · MCh (Surgical Gastroenterology, SGPGIMS) Liver, GI & HPB Surgeon · Director, Dwarika Hospital, Ahmedabad
25+ yrs experience 10,000+ surgeries Trained: SGPGIMS · Japan · Korea
  • IAGES
  • ASI — Association of Surgeons of India
  • SAGES
  • International surgical societies

Quick answer

AI & snippet ready

Yellowing of the eyes and skin (jaundice) happens when bilirubin builds up in the blood — a signal that the liver or bile drainage is affected, and one that should never be ignored. Common causes include a blocked bile duct (often a slipped gallstone), liver disease such as hepatitis or cirrhosis, and tumours of the bile duct, pancreas or gallbladder. Painless jaundice with weight loss needs urgent specialist assessment.

Key takeaways

Jaundice is a sign, not a disease — always investigate it

A blocked bile duct, often a gallstone, is a common cause

Painless jaundice with weight loss needs urgent assessment

ERCP can clear a stone or place a stent without open surgery

Fever, severe pain or confusion with jaundice is an emergency

What exactly is jaundice?

Jaundice is the yellow discolouration of the eyes and skin that appears when a substance called bilirubin builds up in the blood. It is not a disease in itself but a visible signal that something is affecting the liver or the drainage of bile — and because the causes range from mild to serious, it always deserves prompt evaluation.

Bilirubin is a yellow pigment made when old red blood cells are broken down. Normally the liver processes it and sends it out in bile, which drains through the bile ducts into the intestine. When any step in that chain is blocked or damaged, bilirubin backs up into the blood and stains the eyes and skin yellow.

The whites of the eyes usually turn yellow first, which is why it is often a family member who notices it before the patient does. Dark urine and pale stools frequently appear at the same time.

Jaundice is a symptom, like a warning light on a dashboard — the job is always to find which system triggered it, not to treat the colour itself.

What are the common causes of jaundice?

Jaundice usually falls into three groups: a blocked bile duct (often a slipped gallstone), liver disease such as hepatitis or cirrhosis, or a tumour of the bile duct, pancreas or gallbladder. The pattern of symptoms helps point to the cause — and painless jaundice with weight loss, in particular, needs urgent specialist assessment.

The three broad causes

  • Blockage (obstructive): a gallstone, stricture or tumour blocks bile from draining — often with dark urine and pale stools
  • Liver disease (hepatic): hepatitis, alcohol, medication or cirrhosis stops the liver processing bilirubin
  • Blood breakdown (pre-hepatic): excess red-cell breakdown overwhelms a healthy liver

The clues matter. Jaundice with fever and pain suggests an infected, blocked bile duct. Jaundice that is painless but comes with weight loss is the pattern that most worries surgeons, because it can signal a tumour of the pancreas or bile duct that needs early action.

How is the cause of jaundice found and treated?

The cause is pinpointed with a combination of blood tests and imaging — ultrasound first, then CT, MRI/MRCP or endoscopic ultrasound as needed. When the bile duct is blocked, a procedure called ERCP can clear a stone or place a stent to relieve the jaundice quickly, often without open surgery, while the underlying problem is treated.

The usual diagnostic steps

  1. Blood tests to measure bilirubin and liver function and screen for hepatitis
  2. Ultrasound to look for blocked or dilated bile ducts and gallstones
  3. CT, MRI/MRCP or endoscopic ultrasound for a detailed map when needed
  4. ERCP to both confirm a blockage and treat it in the same sitting

ERCP is particularly valuable because it is both a test and a treatment: a flexible scope reaches the bile duct from the inside, where a stone can be removed or a small stent placed to restore drainage. This relieves the jaundice rapidly while the root cause is addressed.

The single most important question in any jaundice is whether the bile duct is blocked — because a blocked, infected duct can become life-threatening quickly and needs urgent drainage.

When is jaundice a medical emergency?

Seek urgent care if jaundice comes with fever and chills, severe abdominal pain, confusion, or vomiting blood or black stools. These signal dangerous complications — an infected blocked bile duct, liver failure or bleeding — that need immediate treatment, not an outpatient appointment next week.

Go to hospital now if you have

  • Fever and shaking chills with the jaundice (possible bile-duct infection)
  • Severe or worsening pain in the upper abdomen
  • Confusion, extreme drowsiness or disorientation
  • Vomiting blood, or black tarry stools
  • Rapidly deepening yellow colour over hours to a day

An infected, obstructed bile duct (called cholangitis) can deteriorate into a serious bloodstream infection within hours. In that situation, urgent drainage of the duct — usually by ERCP — is life-saving, which is why these warning signs should never be watched at home.

Why you should never wait and watch with jaundice

Because the causes of jaundice span from a simple, easily treated gallstone to a serious cancer, delay is the real danger — early assessment is what keeps the treatable causes treatable. Even when the cause turns out to be minor, the only way to know that safely is to have it checked promptly.

Home remedies and traditional treatments aimed at the yellow colour itself do nothing about the underlying blockage or liver problem, and the time lost can matter a great deal — especially when a tumour is behind painless jaundice. Prompt imaging is what separates an early, treatable diagnosis from a late one.

Common causes of jaundice and their typical clues

CauseTypical clue
Bile-duct stonePain, fever and fluctuating jaundice
HepatitisFatigue, recent viral illness
CirrhosisKnown chronic liver disease
Pancreatic / bile-duct cancerPainless jaundice with weight loss

How we get you better — step by step

Accurate diagnosisThe right tests — and only the ones you truly need.
Honest assessmentA clear opinion on whether treatment is really needed.
Key-hole treatmentThe least-invasive effective option, explained fully.
Recovery & follow-upFaster healing with guided aftercare.

Myths vs facts

Myth

Jaundice is always a minor liver infection

Fact

It can signal a blocked bile duct or a tumour, and always needs assessment.

Myth

Jaundice will clear on its own

Fact

Some causes are serious; the underlying problem must be found and treated.

Myth

You always need open surgery for a blocked bile duct

Fact

ERCP can clear a stone or stent the duct without open surgery.

Myth

Home remedies cure jaundice

Fact

Treatment depends entirely on the cause; delay can be dangerous.

Get the right care

Related treatments & services

Complete guide · Knowledge CentreGallstonesRead the full disease hub — causes, symptoms, diagnosis & treatment →

Frequently asked questions

Jaundice is always a signal worth investigating promptly. Some causes are easily treated, but painless jaundice with weight loss needs urgent specialist assessment.

ERCP can clear a bile-duct stone or place a stent to relieve the blockage and jaundice, usually without open surgery.

References & sources

  1. American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases (AASLD) — Practice Guidance
  2. British Society of Gastroenterology — Biliary disease guidelines
  3. EASL Clinical Practice Guidelines — Management of biliary disease

Guidance is based on peer-reviewed evidence and international clinical guidelines, interpreted by Dr. Avinash Tank.

Dr. Avinash Tank
Medically reviewed by
Dr. Avinash Tank — MCh Surgical Gastroenterology

Super-specialist GI, bariatric & cancer surgeon. SGPGIMS (India's premier GI centre) + advanced training in Japan & South Korea. Read full profile →

Last reviewed: June 2026

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