“…Alternative medicines for patients with atopy or severe intolerance of sulfonamides have included Pyrimethamine and Leucovorin with clindamycin or azithromycin or atovaquone, with standard dosages as recommended according to weight. In the unusual circumstance that medicines cannot be administered orally or by intraintestinal tube feeding, trimethoprim, sulfamethoxazole, and clindamycin have been administered intravenously e Corticosteroids should be used only in conjunction with Pyrimethamine, Sulfadiazine, and Leucovorin treatment and should be continued until signs of inflammation (high CSF protein, C1 g/dL) or active chorioretinitis that threatens vision have subsided, ususally *10-14 days; dosage can then be tapered and the steroids discontinued f Image figure from: Benevento et al [173], with permission Curr Pediatr Rep (2014) [206,207]. b Administration of these medicines in management of congenital T. gondii infection in the first year of life.…”