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Oiled Umbilicus

On May 6, l975, a midwife delivered a male infant at home in a town across the Mexican border from Laredo, Texas. The umbilical cord was cut with unsterilized scissors and olive oil was applied to the stump. The child was adopted on the day of birth by a family from Chicago and appeared to be well until the third day of life, when, en route to Chicago, he became irritable, had a runny nose and ate poorly. His parents thought he just had a cold. When he was 5 days old he could no longer nurse and was having some muscle spasms. He also had trouble breathing and was, at times, cyanotic.

Question 1 - Single Best Answer

What are some bacteria which are special problems in infants of this age?   Bugs Database

Haemophilus influenzae, Streptococus pneumoniae, Neisseria meningitidis
Neisseria gonorrhoea, Treponema pallidum, Chlamydia pneumonia
Clostridium tetani, Clostridium botulinum, Clostridium perfringins
Listeria monocytogenes, E. coli K, Streptococcus agalactiae (Group B. Strep)
Staphylococcus aureus, Streptococcus pyogenes, Legionella pneumophilia

Question 2 - Single Best Answer

What are some viruses that are special problems in newborn babies?   Bugs Database

Herpes, rabies, pertussis
Mycoplasma, rubella, coxsackie
CMV, Herpes, echovirus
echovirus, syphilis, Herpes simplex II
rhinovirus, tetanus, CMV

Question 3 - Single Best Answer

Look up the symptoms of the diseases that can be caused by organisms that are problems for newborn babies (not all are necessarily included in the correct answers to the previous two questions) and, considering both the organisms and the symptoms, write down (on a separate piece of paper) the best differential diagnosis for the baby described in the presenting paragraph. After you have written down what you think is the best differential diagnosis, choose the list of differential diagnoses below that most closely corresponds to your list.   Bugs Database

Herpes, tetanus, Group B Strep, Listeriosis, congenital syphilis
Neisseria gonorrhoea, congenital syphilis, Chlamydia trachomatis
congenital rubella, CMV, infant botulism, congenital syphilis
echovirus, Group B. Strep, Campylobacter fetus, rabies

Question 4 - Single Best Answer

How are Herpes, Group B. Strep, and Listeria transmitted to babies?   Bugs Database

Through the placenta before birth.
From doctors or nurses
From the mother, as the baby traverses the birth canal.
From the skin of the mother as the baby nurses.
From the mother, via the respiratory route.

Question 5 - Single Best Answer

How is syphilis transmitted to newborns?   Bugs Database

Through the placenta before birth.
From doctors or nurses.
From the mother, as the baby traverses the birth canal.
From the skin of the mother as the baby nurses.
From the father, via sexual abuse.

Question 6 - Single Best Answer

How is tetanus transmitted to newborns?   Bugs Database

Through the placenta before birth.
From doctors or nurses.
From the mother, as the baby traverses the birth canal.
From the skin of the mother as the baby nurses.
From spores in the environment, into an open wound, usually the umbilicus.

The child's symptom's worsened and on the sixth day he was taken to the hospital. On admission it was noted that he had risus sardonicus, opisthotonos, and trismus. His umbilicus was inflamed and exuded a yellow purulent discharge. Laboratory evaluations included a negative CSF examination.

Question 7 - Single Best Answer

A negative CSF exam would tend to rule out which of the following?   Bugs Database

syphilis and tetanus
Listeria and Group B Streptococcal infection
tetanus and Listeria
a viral infection

Question 8 - Single Best Answer

What is opisthotonos?   Bugs Database

a grinning expression
difficulty in opening the mouth
spasms of the back that bend the back, head, and neck backward
a characteristic odor associated with congenital syphilis

Question 9 - Single Best Answer

Opisthotonos, risus sardonicus, and trismus are all symptoms of what disease?   Bugs Database

rabies
tetanus
syphilis
Group B Streptococcal infection
Listeria

Question 10 - Single Best Answer

What is the causative agent of tetanus?   Bugs Database

Chlamydia tetani
Staphylococcus aureus
Clostridium perfringens
Treponema pallidum
Clostridium tetani

Question 11 - Single Best Answer

What would a Gram stain of the umbilical pus show if the child had tetanus?   Bugs Database

a mixed flora with Gram positive and Gram negative rods and cocci
a pure culture of Gram negative rods
a pure culture of Gram positive rods
only anaerobic organisms
there would be no pus

Question 12 - Single Best Answer

How do the tetanus bacteria cause the symptoms (muscle spasms) of the disease?   Bugs Database

by invading the CNS and killing cells there
by producing a toxin that acts at the neuromuscular junction
by producing a toxin that acts in the spinal cord
by inducing an inappropriate immune response

Question 13 - Single Best Answer

How is tetanus usually diagnosed?   Bugs Database

Gram stain
culture of the organism under anaerobic conditions
PCR test
clinical grounds

Neonatal tetanus was diagnosed on clinical grounds and the infant was given 1000 units of human tetanus immune globulin intramuscularly. Antibiotic therapy with penicillin and gentamicin was begun. Phenobarbital and chlorpromazine were given and the infant was then rehydrated and maintained by continuous intravenous infusion.

Question 14 - Single Best Answer

What was the purpose of the phenobarbital and chlorpromazine?   Bugs Database

to release cell-bound toxin
to help kill the bacteria
to neutralize the toxin
to control the muscle spasms

Question 15 - Single Best Answer

How did the olive oil contribute to the pathogenesis of the disease?   Bugs Database

It was contaminated with Corynebacterium tetani organisms.
It was contaminated with Clostridium tetani organisms.
It was contaminated with spores of the causative agent.
It supplied the fatty acids necessary for the causative organism to grow.
It contributed to an anaerobic environment so the causative agent could grow.

Episodes of muscle spasm and periods of restricted respirations and cyanosis gradually decreased over the first two days of hospitalization; by the third day the infant could tolerate feeding and administration of a sedative via a nasogastric tube. Hypothermia was noted on the fourth hospital day and was attributed to chlorpromazine. Diazepam was substituted for the chlorpromazine and phenobarbital to control the spasms. On about the 13th hospital day the tendency to have spasms began to decrease, and by the 19th day no symptoms related to tetanus toxin were discernible.

Question 16 - Single Best Answer

Will the infant be left with residual nerve damage?   Bugs Database

yes
no

Question 17 - Single Best Answer

What would have been the best way to prevent the infant from getting tetanus?   Bugs Database

Using sterile scissors and keeping the umbilical area clean
Giving the infant tetanus toxoid
Giving the mother tetanus toxoid several weeks before the baby was born
Giving the infant tetanus antitoxin
More than one of the above would help prevent the disease

   

 Location: http://medinfo.ufl.edu/year2/mmid/a23aq.html
  Updated: October 6, 2005

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