Bacterial infections in newborns. Meningitis in newborns.
1. Big picture
Neonatal bacterial infection is an emergency because newborns do not localize infection well. A baby with sepsis or meningitis may not have fever, neck stiffness, or obvious meningeal signs. Instead, the examiner expects you to recognize the pattern:
Poor feeding + temperature instability + respiratory distress/apnea + lethargy/irritability = neonatal sepsis until proven otherwise.
Neonatal meningitis is usually a complication of bacteremia. In newborns, meningitis can be clinically silent, so lumbar puncture must be considered whenever there is suspected sepsis, positive blood culture, seizures, abnormal neurological signs, or persistent illness.
Unlock the rest of this topic
Subscribe to Pediatrics for $10/month and unlock all 60 topics — full exam-structured notes, the State Exam questions integrated into every topic, and the downloadable Anki deck. Cancel anytime.
- ✓All 60 Pediatrics topics, exam-structured
- ✓State Exam questions in every topic
- ✓Downloadable Anki deck (.apkg)
- ✓Cancel anytime
Already subscribed? Sign in
