Micro congenital and neonatal infections Flashcards

1
Q

what are the congenital infections?

A

rubella, CMV, HIV, toxoplasma, treponema, parvovirus B19, HSV, VZV

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2
Q

what are the manifestations of congenital infections?

A

growth retardation (low birth weight), congenital malformations, stillbirths

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3
Q

what are the perinatal infections?

A

neisseria gonorrhoeae, chlamydia, HSV, strep B, e coli, listeria

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4
Q

what are the manifestations of perinatal infections?

A

maningitis, septicemia, pneumonia, preterm labor

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5
Q

what are the postnatal infections?

A

from breast milk: HIV, CMV, HBV
umbilicus: staph aureus, tetanus
person to person: group B strep, listeria, e coli

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6
Q

what are the postnatal infections manifestations?

A

minigitis, septicemia, conjunctivitis, pneumonitis

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7
Q

what are the signs of congenital infection?

A

growth retardation, congential defects, abnormal head size, rash, intracranial calcifications, eye abnormalities, hearing loss, inflammation of CSF, hepatosplenomegaly, hematologic abnormalities, bone lesions

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8
Q

how is definitive diagnosis of congenital infection made?

A

isolate pathogen from infant!!

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9
Q

what are the congenital infections

A
TORCH
Toxoplasmosis
Other (syphilis, hep B, VZV, parvovirus B19, HIV, HTLV-1
Rubella
CMV
HSV
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10
Q

toxoplasma gondii classic triad

A

chorioretinitis (can result in vision loss), hydrocephalus, intracranial calcifications

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11
Q

diagnosis of toxoplasmosis

A

IgM+ in infant is diagnostic

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12
Q

toxoplasma treatment

A

pyrimethamine + sulfadiazine + folinic acid for one year

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13
Q

congenital syphilis manifestations

A

by 3 months:

large puffy placenta, hepatomegaly, rhinitis (snuffles!), rash, lymphadenopathy

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14
Q

test for t. pallidum

A

VDRL (venereal disease research lab), darkfield microscopic exam

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15
Q

t. pallidum treatment

A

penicillin G

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16
Q

rubella symptoms

A

hearing loss!

microcephaly, PDA (patent ductus arteriosis), cataracts

17
Q

risk factors for congenital CMV

A

no prior infection, pregnancy at younger age, first pregnancy, new sex partner during pregnancy, frequent contact with babies/toddlers
-especially PRIMARY infection

18
Q

CMV symptoms

A

most asymptomatic - 10% with symptoms
small size, hepatosplenomegaly, rash, jaundice, chorioretinitis, neuro involvement (microcephaly, seizures, abnormal neuro, feeding difficulties)

19
Q

congenital CMV diagnosis and treatment

A

diagnose: PCR on urine or blood
treat: ganciclovir IV or valganciclovie PO

20
Q

congenital herpes simplex infections - what is worst situation for baby

A

HSV-2; primary infection ; visible lesions; intrauterine; disseminated infection (causes severe mental impairment)

21
Q

treatment of HSV

A

C-section birth, antiviral prophylaxis, acyclovir for infant

22
Q

congenital varicella syndrome

A

primary infection in mother damages fetus - limbs and brain development are impaired

23
Q

congenital varicella treatment and prevention

A

acyclovir - prevent with vaccination of all seronegative women who reach childbearing age

24
Q

parvovirus B19 presentation

A

febrile illness without rash precedes followed by “slapped cheek” rash on face and erythematous maculopapular rash, arthralgia, arthritis

25
Q

what are the most common causes of neonatal sepsis

A

group B strep and e coli

26
Q

risk for chronic infection with HBV

A

90%

27
Q

what treatment is used for women with HIV

A

3 part zidovudine (ZDV) regimen - reduces transmission rate to 2%
-avoid agents with tertogenic effects (efavirenz)

28
Q

group B strep

A

encapsulated gram-positive diplococcus - 25% women asymptomatic carriers

29
Q

what are risk factors for early-onset GBS (group B strep) disease

A

previous baby with GBS, GBS in urine, fever during labor, heavy maternal colonization, delivery before 37 weeks, premature or prolonged rupture of membranes

30
Q

what reduces risk of group B strep in babies

A

IAP intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis

31
Q

what are symptoms of GBS infection

A
  1. early onset: respiratory tachypnea, grunting, hypoxia, appears ill, temperature instability, hypotension, shock
  2. late onset: sepsis (fever, irritability, lethargy, poor feeding, tachypnea, gruniting apnea), meningitis (bulging fontanel, nuchal rigidity, focal neurologic findings
  3. late onset GBS: sepsis with foci in CNS, soft tissues, bones, joints
32
Q

GBS diagnosis and management

A

culture bacteria from normally steril site (CNS)

sensitive to penicillin (IAP)