58 Assessment of the Mother, Fetus, and Newborn
59 Maternal Diseases Affecting the Newborn
60 Diseases of the Fetus
61 Respiratory Diseases of the Newborn
N124-133 Newborn Respiratory Problems
62 Anemia and Hyperbilirubinemia
63 Necrotizing Enterocolitis
64 Hypoxic-Ischemic Encephalopathy, Intracranial Hemorrhage, and Seizures
65 Sepsis and Meningitis
66 Congenital Infections
C131.1 Congenital Infections
- Bacteria
- Listeria monocytogenes (Chapter 215 )
- Syphilis (Treponema pallidum ) (Chapter 245)
- Viruses
- Cytomegalovirus (Chapter 282)
- Hepatitis B (Chapter 385)
- Hepatitis C (Chapter 385)
- Herpes simplex virus (Chapter 279 )
- Human immunodeficiency virus (Chapter 302 )
- Human parvovirus B19 (Chapter 278)
- Lymphocytic choriomeningitis virus (Chapter 298 )
- Rubella (Chapter 274 )
- Varicella-zoster virus (Chapter 280 )
- Zika virus (Chapter 294.12 )
- Parasite
- Toxoplasmosis (Toxoplasma gondii ) (Chapter 316)
Differential diagnosis
- Listeriosis
- CNS disease, meningitis : at 3 days (preterm) ~ 3 weeks age (full term)
disseminated organ involvement (i.e., liver and lung) - Chorioamnionitis & PPROM ✅
- IV ampicilin + gentamicin
- CNS disease, meningitis : at 3 days (preterm) ~ 3 weeks age (full term)
- Syphillis
- CNS disease – rare
Hepatomegaly - Chorioamnionitis & PPROM ❌ Miscarriage, stillbirth, hydrops fetalis ✅
- CNS disease – rare

- HSV
- CNS disease (fever, seizure, hypotonia) : at 2-3 weeks age
Sepsis-like disseminated disease (e.g., hepatomegaly, pneumonitis)
Vesicular skin lesion, keratoconjunctivitis - Chorioamnionitis & PPROM ❌
- CNS disease (fever, seizure, hypotonia) : at 2-3 weeks age
- Parasite – Toxoplasmosis (oplasma gondii)
- Mononucleosis-like disease
- Severity decreases with gestational age
- Infection in 1st trimester: classic triad (chorioretinitis, intracranial calcification, hydrocephalus) + other nonspecific Sx (blueberry muffin rash, jaundice)
- Infection in 2nd-3rd trimester: mostly subclinical or mild.
- Chorioamnionitis & PPROM ❌
C131.2 Perinatal Infections
- Chlamydia trachomatis (Chapter 253 )
- Escherichia coli (Chapter 227 )
- Genital mycoplasmas (Chapter 251 )
- Group B streptococci (Chapter 211 )
| Early onset (age <7 days) | Late onset (age >7 days) | |
| Pathogenesis | Vertical transmission in utero or during vaginal delivery Reduced transmission with maternal intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis | Horizontal transmission from colonized individuals |
| Clinical features | Typically presents within 24 hours Sepsis, pneumonia, meningitis | Typically presents age 4-5 weeks Bacteremia, meningitis, focal infection (eg, cellulitis, adenitis, osteomyelitis) |
- Diagnosis: Gram-positive cocci in pairs and short chains on culture of blood, CSF, or body fluid
- Treatment
- Early initiation of empiric antibiotics
Definitive therapy with penicillin G
- Early initiation of empiric antibiotics
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae (Chapter 219 )
- Syphilis (Treponema pallidum ) (Chapter 245 )
Viruses
- Cytomegalovirus (Chapter 282 )
- At birth, 90% are asymptomatic.
Blueberry muffin rash, jaundice, small size for gestational age, microcephaly, sensorineuronal hearing loss. Periventricular calcifications and hydrocephalus - Chorioamnionitis & PPROM ❌
- At birth, 90% are asymptomatic.

- Enteroviruses (Chapter 277 )
- Hepatitis B (Chapter 385)
- Herpes simplex virus (Chapter 279 )
- Human immunodeficiency virus (Chapter 302 )
Fungi
- Candida spp. (Chapter 261 )