Q 15: Infections (Complications)
A neonate presents with chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, and intracranial calcifications. The mother reports exposure to cats during pregnancy. Which congenital infection is most consistent with these findings? (Question Id: 745004)
Keywords in the Stem to identify correct option
- Chorioretinitis → strongly points toward congenital toxoplasmosis (ocular involvement is classic).
- Hydrocephalus + Intracranial calcifications → together with chorioretinitis form the classic triad of congenital toxoplasmosis.
- Exposure to cats → risk factor for Toxoplasma gondii infection.
Classic triad
(chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, intracranial calcifications) makes Toxoplasmosis the only correct answer.
Explanation
(Option D) Toxoplasmosis:
- Caused by Toxoplasma gondii, a protozoan parasite.
- Acquired through ingestion of oocysts from cat feces, undercooked meat, or transplacental transmission during maternal infection.
- Classic triad in congenital toxoplasmosis:
- Chorioretinitis (eye inflammation leading to blindness)
- Hydrocephalus (due to obstruction from CNS inflammation)
- Intracranial calcifications (diffuse, typically in basal ganglia)
- Early infection may cause miscarriage; later infection causes neurologic and ocular disease.
(Option A) Cytomegalovirus (CMV):
- Congenital CMV is the most common congenital infection.
- Classic features: periventricular calcifications, microcephaly, hearing loss, seizures, blueberry muffin rash.
- Unlike toxoplasmosis, calcifications are periventricular rather than diffuse.
(Option B) Rubella:
- Congenital rubella syndrome (CRS) triad:
- Sensorineural deafness
- Cataracts
- Cardiac defects (e.g., PDA, pulmonary artery stenosis)
- May also cause blueberry muffin rash and microcephaly.
- Ocular chorioretinitis and hydrocephalus are not typical.
(Option C) Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV):
- Congenital/neonatal HSV usually presents with:
- Vesicular skin lesions
- Sepsis-like illness with hepatitis and DIC
- CNS disease (encephalitis, seizures)
- Not associated with calcifications + triad described in the stem.
(Option E) Syphilis:
- Congenital syphilis features:
- Snuffles (profuse nasal discharge), Hutchinson teeth, saddle nose deformity, saber shins
- Skin rashes, hepatosplenomegaly
- Later findings: deafness, keratitis
- No hydrocephalus or calcification triad.
Key Concept
The classic triad of chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, and intracranial calcifications with history of cat exposure in pregnancy is diagnostic of congenital toxoplasmosis. Differentiation from CMV is based on site of calcifications (diffuse vs. periventricular).
Subject: Obstetrics & Gynecology & Pediatrics
- Obstetrics (maternal exposure → fetal infection), Microbiology (parasite: Toxoplasma gondii).
- Pediatrics → Neonatal Infections (Congenital TORCH infections)
System: Female Reproductive System – INFECTIONS – Complications – Perinatal
Topic: Obstetrics – Maternal Infections in Pregnancy – TORCH Infections – Toxoplasmosis in Pregnancy and Fetal Complications
Obstetrics – Maternal Infections in Pregnancy – TORCH Infections – Toxoplasmosis in Pregnancy and Fetal Complications
Aspect |
Details |
Clinical Relevance |
Causative agent |
Toxoplasma gondii (protozoan parasite) |
- Transmitted via cat feces (oocysts), undercooked meat, unwashed vegetables;
- transplacental infection if primary maternal infection occurs during pregnancy.
|
Maternal infection |
Often asymptomatic or mild (fever, lymphadenopathy, myalgia, flu-like illness). |
- Hard to detect in mother;
- risk depends on timing of infection in pregnancy (1st trimester → severe, later → milder).
|
Pathogenesis (pregnancy) |
Parasite crosses placenta → infects fetus. |
Leads to:
miscarriage, stillbirth, or congenital disease depending on gestational age. |
Fetal/neonatal complications (classic triad) |
- Chorioretinitis,
- hydrocephalus,
- intracranial calcifications.
|
Most characteristic triad of congenital toxoplasmosis. |
Other fetal manifestations |
- Growth restriction,
- seizures,
- hepatosplenomegaly,
- jaundice.
|
Severe cases → long-term neurologic & ocular impairment. |
Diagnosis in mother |
Serology:
- IgM (acute),
- IgG (past exposure),
- PCR.
|
Important for screening if maternal exposure suspected. |
Diagnosis in fetus/newborn |
- Amniotic fluid PCR,
- ultrasound (hydrocephalus, calcifications),
- neonatal serology.
|
Helps confirm congenital infection. |
Prevention (maternal) |
- Avoid raw/undercooked meat,
- avoid cat litter,
- hand hygiene.
|
Key for counseling in antenatal care. |
Management in pregnancy |
- Spiramycin (to reduce vertical transmission);
- pyrimethamine + sulfadiazine + folinic acid if fetal infection confirmed.
|
Early maternal treatment reduces fetal risk. |
Exam Key Point
In Obstetrics, this falls under Maternal Infections – TORCH group. Toxoplasmosis in pregnancy is characterized by asymptomatic maternal disease but serious fetal complications, most classically the triad of chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, and intracranial calcifications.
Differential Diagnosis
(for your MCQ, focusing on other TORCH infections that can mimic congenital toxoplasmosis)
Condition |
Key Neonatal Findings |
How to Differentiate from Toxoplasmosis |
Congenital CMV |
- Microcephaly,
- periventricular calcifications,
- seizures,
- hearing loss,
- blueberry muffin rash
|
- Calcifications are periventricular (not diffuse),
- maternal infection is viral,
- no cat exposure history.
|
Congenital Rubella |
Triad:
- Sensorineural deafness, cataracts, PDA;
also
- blueberry muffin rash,
- growth restriction
|
- Eye finding = cataract (not chorioretinitis);
- cardiac defect typical,
- no hydrocephalus/calcifications.
|
Congenital HSV |
- Vesicular rash,
- keratoconjunctivitis,
- encephalitis,
- seizures,
- hepatitis
|
- Prominent skin lesions and encephalitis,
- not classic hydrocephalus/calcifications.
|
Congenital Syphilis |
- Snuffles,
- rash, hepatosplenomegaly,
- skeletal deformities (saddle nose, saber shins),
- Hutchinson triad (later)
|
- No hydrocephalus or calcifications;
- spirochete infection with mucocutaneous findings.
|
Other causes of hydrocephalus/
calcifications |
- Genetic syndromes,
- metabolic disorders,
- Zika virus
|
- No maternal cat exposure;
- absence of classic triad (chorioretinitis + hydrocephalus + calcifications).
|
Key Exam Differentiator
- Toxoplasmosis → Diffuse intracranial calcifications + chorioretinitis + hydrocephalus (Classic Triad)
- CMV → Periventricular calcifications + microcephaly + sensorineural hearing loss

Obstetrics – Maternal Infections in Pregnancy – TORCH Infections: Toxoplasmosis and Fetal Complications
The diagram illustrates the TORCH infections, highlighting toxoplasmosis in pregnancy as a maternal risk due to cat exposure, and demonstrates its fetal complications, including the classic triad of chorioretinitis, hydrocephalus, and intracranial calcifications. It links maternal infection with vertical transmission and resulting neonatal outcomes.