Neonatal tuberculosis

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Background

Pathophysiology

  • May be either acquired antenatally as congenital tuberculosis, via hematogenous dissemination from a mother with either miliary or primary TB, or post-natally as neonatal tuberculosis, via the usual airborne mechanism

Clinical Presentation

  • Similar presentation for both congenital and neonatal tuberculosis
  • Symptoms may take 1 to 2 weeks to develop (congenital) or several months (neonatal)
  • Hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, respiratory distress, fever, lymphadenopathy, abdominal distension, lethargy, irritability, poor feeding and ear discharge
  • Congenital TB may also have low birth weight
  • Miliary or nodular pattern with hilar lymphadenopathy on chest x-ray

Differential Diagnosis

Diagnosis

  • Can be difficult if mother does not have a history of TB
  • Based on chest x-ray plus clinical picture
  • TST and IGRA are typically negative in neonatal period
  • Send sputum or gastric aspirates for smear and culture ± PCR
    • Can also send ascitic or pleural fluid, or blood, as indicated
    • Newborns with suspected or proven disseminated TB need lumbar puncture
  • Placental histopathology and culture, if possible

Management