Infants ≥1 Month of Age and Children (See Red Book for additional details; note differences in penicillin dosing)
Evaluation
For the infant or child identified as having reactive serologic tests for syphilis, the birthing parent’s serologic test results and records should be reviewed to assess whether the infant or child has congenital or acquired syphilis.
Evaluation for congenital syphilis after 1 month of age includes:
- CSF analysis for VDRL, cell count, and protein
- complete blood cell count with differential and platelet count
- if clinically indicated, long-bone radiographs, chest radiograph, liver function tests, ophthalmologic examination, neuroimaging, and auditory brain-stem response)
- testing for HIV infection.
Treatment
- Standard Intravenous Therapy:
- Medication:Â Aqueous crystalline penicillin G.
- Dosage: 200,000–300,000 U/kg/day intravenously.
- Administration: 50,000 U/kg per dose, every 4–6 hours, for 10 days.
- Optional Additional IM Therapy:
- After the 10-day IV course, some experts recommend a single dose of penicillin G benzathine (50,000 U/kg IM, not to exceed 2.4 million U).
- Alternative IM Therapy for Select Cases:
- If the patient has no clinical manifestations, a normal CSF examination, and a negative CSF-VDRL test result, some experts suggest:
- Penicillin G benzathine:Â 50,000 U/kg IM once weekly for 3 weeks (not to exceed 2.4 million U per dose).
- Follow-Up Testing:
- Serologic response should show a fourfold decline in titers over time. Persistent or rising titers necessitate further evaluation.
Infants ≥1 Month of Age and Children (See Red Book for additional details; note differences in penicillin dosing)
Evaluation
For the infant or child identified as having reactive serologic tests for syphilis, the birthing parent’s serologic test results and records should be reviewed to assess whether the infant or child has congenital or acquired syphilis.
Evaluation for congenital syphilis after 1 month of age includes:
- CSF analysis for VDRL, cell count, and protein
- complete blood cell count with differential and platelet count
- if clinically indicated, long-bone radiographs, chest radiograph, liver function tests, ophthalmologic examination, neuroimaging, and auditory brain-stem response)
- testing for HIV infection.
Treatment
- Standard Intravenous Therapy:
- Medication:Â Aqueous crystalline penicillin G.
- Dosage: 200,000–300,000 U/kg/day intravenously.
- Administration: 50,000 U/kg per dose, every 4–6 hours, for 10 days.
- Optional Additional IM Therapy:
- After the 10-day IV course, some experts recommend a single dose of penicillin G benzathine (50,000 U/kg IM, not to exceed 2.4 million U).
- Alternative IM Therapy for Select Cases:
- If the patient has no clinical manifestations, a normal CSF examination, and a negative CSF-VDRL test result, some experts suggest:
- Penicillin G benzathine:Â 50,000 U/kg IM once weekly for 3 weeks (not to exceed 2.4 million U per dose).
- Follow-Up Testing:
- Serologic response should show a fourfold decline in titers over time. Persistent or rising titers necessitate further evaluation.