II. Causes

  1. See Pneumonia Causes in Children
  2. Bacterial Pneumonia is most common cause of Pneumonia in Newborns
  3. Cause based on timing
    1. Congenital Pneumonia
      1. Maternal infection transmitted to fetus (via chorion or transplacental)
    2. Early onset Neonatal Pneumonia
      1. Onset in first 7 days after birth
      2. Vertical transmission from mother
    3. Late onset Neonatal Pneumonia
      1. Onset >7 days after birth
      2. Environmental exposure (including hospital acquired and Ventilator acquired)

III. Signs

  1. See Pediatric Pneumonia
  2. Neonatal Respiratory Distress (e.g. apnea, Tachypnea, grunting, Hypoxia, retractions)

IV. Differential Diagnosis

V. Labs

  1. See Neonatal Sepsis
  2. Blood Culture in all neontal Pneumonia cases

VI. Imaging: Chest XRay

  1. Lung infiltrates
  2. Consolidation or cavitation may be present

VII. Management

  1. See Pneumonia Management in Children
  2. See Neonatal Respiratory Distress
  3. See Neonatal Resuscitation
  4. Start empiric Antibiotic therapy in all suspected Neonatal Pneumonia cases
  5. Consider infectious disease Consultation

Images: Related links to external sites (from Bing)