Topic Overview
Congenital syphilis occurs when a mother's
syphilis goes untreated during pregnancy and is passed
to the baby through the
placenta. A baby can also become infected with
syphilis during labor or delivery.
The risk of infecting the baby is greatest when the mother is in the
early stages of syphilis. But infection is possible any time during
pregnancy.
It is very important that a pregnant woman have a blood test to detect
syphilis. The baby's risk of getting syphilis is significantly reduced if the
mother receives treatment during pregnancy. If the mother is treated before the
16th week of her pregnancy, the baby will usually not become infected.
If an infected mother does not receive treatment, the mother may
miscarry, or the baby may be born dead, die shortly after birth, be born early,
or be infected with syphilis.
Complications that can occur in a baby whose infected mother was not
treated include:
- A flat bridge of the nose (saddle
nose).
- Permanent incisor teeth that are peg-shaped, widely spaced,
and notched at the end with a crescent-shaped deformity in the center (notched
teeth or Hutchinson's teeth).
- Inflammation of
the
cornea, which may cause blindness (interstitial
keratitis).
- A progressive, disabling, and life-threatening
complication involving the brain (neurosyphilis).
- Deafness.
- Bone
deformities.
Antibiotics can prevent progression of the disease in
an infected baby. But problems that have already developed may not be
reversible.
If the baby lives past the first 6 to 12 months and is not treated, the disease can progress to a
latent stage in which no symptoms are present but complications can appear over time.
Credits
ByHealthwise Staff
Primary Medical ReviewerKathleen Romito, MD - Family Medicine
E. Gregory Thompson, MD - Internal Medicine
Specialist Medical ReviewerKevin C. Kiley, MD - Obstetrics and Gynecology
Current as ofMarch 20, 2017