Diseases of Infancy and Childhood: Perinatal infections, fetal hydrops Flashcards

1
Q

Microbes can enter the host by doing what?

A

breaching epithelial surfaces, inhalation, ingestion, or sexual transmission

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2
Q

in general, fetal and perinatal infections are acquired through one of two primary routes. What are these routes?

A

transcervically (aka ascending) or transplacentally (hematologic)

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3
Q

Occasionally, infection occur by a combination of the two routes- how so?

A

ascending microorganism infects the endometrium and then invades the fetal bloodstream via the chorionic villi

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4
Q

perinatal sepsis can be grouped clinically based on what?

A

early onset (within the first 7 days of life) versus late onset (from 7 days to 3 months)

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5
Q

most cases of early-onset sepsis are acquired at or shortly before birth and tend to result in clinical signs and symptoms of what?

A

PNA, sepsis, and occasionally meningitis within 4-5 days of life

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6
Q

what is the most common cause of early onset sepsis as well as early-onset bacterial meningitis?

A

group B streptococcus

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7
Q

what could be the source of perinatal infections?

A

bacteria, fungus, parasites, viruses, TORCH

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8
Q

What are the different routes in which vertical transmission can occur?

A

placental-fetal transmission, transmission during birth, and postnatal transmission in maternal milk

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9
Q

What are 2 examples of infections caused via transmission during birth?

A

gonococcal and chlamydial conjunctivitis

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10
Q

what are 3 examples of infections transmitted via postnatal transmission in maternal milk?

A

cytomegalovirus (CMV), HIV, and hepatitis B virus

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11
Q

what does fetal hydrops refer to?

A

the accumulation of edema fluid in the fetus during intrauterine growth

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12
Q

there are 2 general patterns of fluid accumulation in fetal hydrops, what are they?

A

hydrops fetalis (generalized) and cystic hygroma (localized)

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13
Q

What are the two different etiologies of fetal hydrops?

A

immune hydrops and non-immune hydrops

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14
Q

what is immune hydrops caused by?

A

a hemolytic disease caused by blood group antigen incompatibility between mother and fetus

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15
Q

what are the three major causes of non-immune hydrops?

A

cardiovascular defects, chromosomal anomalies, and fetal anemia

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16
Q

Immune hydrops is what type of reaction?

A

a type II hypersensitivity reaction (antibodies react with antigens present on cell surfaces or in the extracellular matrix)

17
Q

What happens if there is IgG antibody attachment to Rh+ erythrocytes? and what does this cause/lead to?

A

removal and destruction of the erythrocyte-antibody complex; causes anemia and hemoglobin degradation

18
Q

what does anemia in the fetus lead to?

A

extramedullary hematopoiesis and cardiac decompensation

19
Q

what does hemoglobin degradation lead to in the fetus?

A

an excess of bilirubin; which leads to jaundice and kernicterus

20
Q

What does the cardiac decompensation that results from anemia in the fetus lead to?

A

hydrops

21
Q

the incidence of maternal Rh isoimmunization has decreased significantly since the use of what?

A

Rhesis immune globulin (RhIg) containing anti-D antibodies

22
Q

when should administration of RhIg take place?

A

at 28 weeks of gestation and within 72 hours of delivery to Rh-negative mothers; also administered following abortions because these too can lead to immunization

23
Q

what are some of the cardiovascular defects that could cause non-immune hydrops?

A

structural and functional anomalies (congenital malformations and arrhythmias)

24
Q

what are some of the chromosomal anomalies that could cause non-immune hydrops?

A

45, XO (turner syndrome) and trisomes 21 and 18

25
Q

what is an example of fetal anemia that could cause non-immune hydrops?

A

alpha thalassemia (most common cause), transplacental parovovirus B19 and twin-twin transfusion

26
Q

What are the two consequences of excessive destruction of red cells in the neonate?

A

anemia and jaundice

27
Q

What is the mechanism for the development of generalized hydrops?

A

with more severe hemolysis, progressive anemia develops and may result in hypoxic injury to the heart and liver; because of the liver injury, plasma protein synthesis (albumin) decreases. Cardiac hypoxia may lead to cardiac decompensation and failure; the combination of reduced plasma oncotic pressure and increased hydrostatic pressure in the circulation (secondary to cardiac failure) results in generalized edema and anasarca

28
Q

What accounts for the presence in the peripheral circulation of large numbers of immature red blood cells,, including reticulocytes and erythroblasts?

A

the increased hematopoietic activity