Key Concept Respiratory distress in the newborn presents with tachypnea (>60/min), grunting, nasal flaring, retractions, and cyanosis.
| Condition | Timing | Key Features | Imaging |
|---|---|---|---|
| Respiratory Distress Syndrome (RDS) | Immediate (preterm) | Surfactant deficiency; ground‑glass opacities, air bronchograms, low lung volumes | Diffuse granular/ground‑glass |
| Transient Tachypnea of the Newborn (TTN) | First few hours | Delayed clearance of fetal lung fluid; term infants, C‑section, resolves <48h | Prominent perihilar markings, fluid in fissures |
| Meconium Aspiration Syndrome (MAS) | Immediate (term/post‑term) | Meconium‑stained amniotic fluid, hyperinflation, patchy infiltrates, pneumothorax risk | Coarse irregular opacities, hyperinflation |
| Congenital Pneumonia | Variable | GBS, E. coli, Listeria; may present with sepsis | Patchy infiltrates, effusions |
| Congenital Diaphragmatic Hernia (CDH) | Immediate | Scaphoid abdomen, bowel sounds in chest, respiratory distress at birth | Bowel loops in chest, mediastinal shift |
| System | Manifestations |
|---|---|
| Respiratory | Chronic cough, purulent sputum, recurrent pneumonia/bronchitis, bronchiectasis (upper lobe predominant), nasal polyps, chronic sinusitis |
| Gastrointestinal | Meconium ileus (newborn), pancreatic insufficiency (malabsorption, steatorrhea, failure to thrive), distal intestinal obstruction syndrome (DIOS), biliary cirrhosis |
| Endocrine | CF‑related diabetes (CFRD) |
| Reproductive | Male infertility (congenital bilateral absence of vas deferens), reduced fertility in females |
| Other | Clubbing, salt loss (hyponatremic dehydration), hypertrophic osteoarthropathy |
| Lesion | Key Features | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Congenital Pulmonary Airway Malformation (CPAM) (formerly CCAM) | Hamartomatous lung tissue; usually single lobe. May cause respiratory distress or recurrent infection. | Surgical resection (risk of infection, malignancy) |
| Bronchopulmonary Sequestration | Non‑functioning lung tissue with systemic arterial supply (from aorta). Intralobar vs. extralobar. | Surgical resection or embolization of feeding vessel |
| Congenital Lobar Emphysema | Hyperinflation of one lobe (usually LUL) due to bronchial cartilage deficiency; air trapping. | Observation if mild; lobectomy if severe distress |
| Bronchogenic Cyst | Foregut duplication cyst; may compress airway or become infected. | Surgical excision |
| Age Group | Most Common Pathogens | Empiric Therapy |
|---|---|---|
| Neonates (<1 month) | GBS, E. coli, Listeria, CMV | Ampicillin + Gentamicin (or Cefotaxime) |
| 1‑3 months | Afebrile: Chlamydia trachomatis (afebrile, staccato cough), RSV. Febrile: S. pneumoniae, H. flu, S. aureus. | Afebrile: Azithromycin. Febrile: Ampicillin or Ceftriaxone. |
| 3 months – 5 years | Viruses (RSV, parainfluenza, influenza), S. pneumoniae, H. influenzae type B (if unvaccinated) | Amoxicillin (outpatient); Ceftriaxone (inpatient) |
| >5 years | Mycoplasma pneumoniae, S. pneumoniae, Chlamydia pneumoniae | Azithromycin or Amoxicillin |