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Urinary Tract Infection Dr. Reham Almardini

Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

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Page 1: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Urinary Tract Infection

Dr. Reham Almardini

Page 2: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Urinary tract infection In Childhood

• Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5%

• 1% of boys and 1-3% of girls

• May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract abnormality

• Cause significant long- term morbidity, renal scarring, hypertension & renal impairment

• The risk of scarring is greatest in infants;

in whom diagnosis is often overlooked or delayed because clinical features are non-specific

Page 3: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• The most common bacterial cause of UTI in children

is Escherichia coli (UPEC), 80% of cases

• Ascending UTI can lead to pyelonephritis, AKI, renal

abscess, bacteremia

• Chronically, UTIs can result in renal scarring,

proteinuria, hypertension, and CKD

Page 4: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• 1st yr of life, the male : female ratio is 2.8-5.4

• Beyond 1-2 yr, male : female ratio of 1 : 10

• Pyelonephritis is the most common serious

bacterial infection in infants < 24 mo of age

who have fever without an obvious focus

Page 5: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract
Page 6: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Urinary Tract Infection In Children

• Delay in treatment is associated with an increased risk of scarring in susceptible children

• Accurate & rapid diagnosis of UTI is essential and requires a very high index of suspicion particularly in the youngest

• Scarring, once present, is irreversible and if severe may lead to chronic renal failure

• Reflux nephropathy is probably the most important factor in the development of hypertension in children and young adults

Page 7: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract
Page 8: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

UTI Symptoms and Signs

CYSTITIS

• Hematuria, dysuria, frequency,

Urgency, Hisitancy, Dripling,

New Onset Enuresis

• No fever or low grade

• Suprepupic Pain and Tenderness

PEYLONEPHRITIS

• potentially severe, but « variable »

expression

• Signs in neoborn: non specific,

Sepsis

• High Fever, Chills, Vomitting ,

LOIN pain, Loin Tenderness

• Leukocytosis

• Acute phase reactantant

• urine analysis

Page 9: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Criteria for Diagnosis of UTI

• Both urinalysis results that suggest infection (pyuria or

bacteriuria) & the presence of at least 50,000 CFU/ mL of a

uropathogen cultured from a urine specimen obtained

• Pyuria is a hallmark of true UTI and helps distinguish UTI

from Asymptomatic Bacteruria

• Change in this action statement is that the threshold criterion

for a positive urinalysis result was reduced from 100,000 to

50,000 CFU/ mL

Page 10: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Urine sample collection

• A clean catch urine sample is the recommended method

for urine collection

• when it is not possible to collect urine by non-invasive

methods, catheter samples or suprapubic aspiration

should be used

• In an infant or child with a high risk of serious illness it is

highly preferable that a urine sample is obtained;

however, treatment should not be delayed if a urine

sample is unobtainable

Page 11: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• Urine specimen should be obtained for both culture & urinalysis before an antimicrobial is administered

• The specimen should be obtained by catheterization or suprapubic aspiration because the diagnosis of UTI

cannot be established reliably by a culture of urine collected in a bag

(Evidence Quality A)

Page 12: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract
Page 13: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract
Page 14: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Scaring After Initial UTI

• In a meta-analysis 2010; the risk of renal scarring

after an initial UTI in childhood was estimated to

be 15%

• About 50% in children having acute pyelonephritis

and those with VUR being more likely to develop

permanent scarring compared to those without VUR,

and those with higher grade VUR more than those

with lower grades

Page 15: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Atypical UTI

• Seriously ill

• Poor urine flow

• Abdominal or bladder mass

• Septicemia

• Failure to respond to treatment with suitable

antibiotic within 48 hours

• Infection with non-Ecoli organism

Page 16: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Recurrent UTI

• Two or more episodes with acute

pyelonephritis/ upper urinary tract infection ,

or

• One episode of UTI with acute pyelonephritis

plus one or more episode of UTI with cystitis

• Three or more episodes of cystitis

• In six months periods

Page 17: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Simple versus complicated UTI

• Complicated

1. Presence of fever

> 39 C

2. Systemic toxicity

3. Persistent vomiting

4. Dehydration

5. Renal angle tenderness

6. Raised creatinine

• Simple

1.Low grade fever

Dysuria frequency

urgency

Absence of complicated

UTI

Page 18: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• NICE 2007) & AAP 2011, 2015 : VCUG should not

be performed routinely after first, febrile, UTI in

patients less than 24 months old unless

• RUS reveals abnormalities as HN, scarring or

findings suggest high-grade VUR or obstructive

uropathy

• Atypical or complex clinical circumstances such as

atypical/recurrent febrile UTI

• In contrast, the American (2012) and European

(2015) Urological Associations have continued to

recommend performing a VCUG after first febrile

UTI in children less than 2 years of age

Page 19: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

NICE-2007 revised 2011 < 6 months

Page 20: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

NICE….6 Months -3 Years

Page 21: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

NICE…..> 3 years

Page 22: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Urologic Imaging

• Febrile infants and young children with UTI

should undergo renal and bladder

Ultrasonography

Page 23: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Urologic Imaging

• VCUG should not be performed routinely after the first

febrile UTI

• It is indicated if kidney & bladder US reveals HN,

scarring, or findings that suggest high-grade VUR & in

other atypical or complex clinical circumstances

• Further evaluation should be conducted if there is a

recurrence of febrile UTI

Page 24: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Antimicrobial Therapy

• Initiating treatment orally or parenterally is equally effective

• The clinician should base the choice of agent on local

antimicrobial sensitivity patterns (if available)

• Should adjust the choice according to sensitivity testing of

the isolated uro-pathogen

Page 25: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Treatment of children with urinary

tract infection….

• Treatment of infection

• Prevention of renal injury

• Relief of the symptoms

• Association between delayed treatment and increased risk of renal scarring

• A ‘best guess’ antibiotic should be started whilst awaiting results of the urine culture, and antibiotics altered accordingly

Coulthard et al., 2014a, Smellie et al., 1985, 1994; Dick andFeldman, 1996; Coulthard et al., 2009

Page 26: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Parental Education and Follow-up

• After confirmation of UTI, the clinician should instruct the

child’s caregivers to seek prompt (ideally within 48 hours)

medical evaluation for future febrile illnesses to ensure that

recurrent infection can be quickly detected and treated

(Evidence Quality C)

• In the past, frequent follow-up cultures were recommended

to identify asymptomatic recurrences. However, it is now

recognized that this likely misidentified girls with

asymptomatic bacteriuria as having recurrent or chronic

UTI.

Page 27: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Usual indications for hospitalization

and/or parenterally therapy include

1. Age <2 months

2. Clinical uro-sepsis (toxic appearance,

hypotension, poor capillary refill)

3. Immunocompromised patient

4. Vomiting or inability to tolerate oral medication

5. Lack of adequate outpatient follow-up (eg, no

telephone, live far from hospital)

6. Failure to respond to outpatient therapy

Page 28: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Empiric Antimicrobial Therapy

• Early and aggressive antibiotic therapy (eg, within 72 hours of presentation) is necessary to prevent renal damage

• Initiate immediately after appropriate urine collection in children who are at increased risk for renal scarring if UTI is not promptly treated:

1. Fever (especially >39°C [102.2°F] or >48 hours)

2. Ill appearance

3. Costovertebral angle tenderness

4. Known immune deficiency

5. Known urologic abnormality

Page 29: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Type of Antibiotic for Empiric Therapy

• Antibiotic that adequate cover E. coli. The agent of choice should be

guided by local resistance patterns

• Approximately 50% E. coli are resistant to Amoxicillin, Ampicillin High

rates of E. coli resistance to first-generation Cephalosporins, TMP-SMX

• Third-generation Cephalosporins & Aminoglycosides are appropriate first-

line

• Oral agents; Cefixime, Amox –Clav , Quinolones ( Pseudomonus)

• Local microbiology advice is required about local resistance patterns

• Recent antibiotic use, including prophylaxis, should also be taken into

account when medication is chosen

Page 30: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Switch to oral antibiotics when the patient is

tolerating oral fluids and has been afebril for

24 hours

Page 31: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Response to Antibiotic

• In children who worsen or fail to improve within 48 hours of;

1. broadening antimicrobial therapy may be indicated if the culture and sensitivity results are not yet available. Enterococcus coverage by ampicillin or amoxicillin

2. RBUS to evaluate the presence of a renal abscess or surgically correctable anatomic abnormalities or obstruction

• Repeat urine culture — Observational studies suggest there is little utility in children who are treated with an antibiotic to which their uropathogen is susceptible

Page 32: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

NICE / Tips

• For infants and children who receive aminoglycosides (gentamicin or amikacin), once daily dosing is recommended

• If parenteral treatment is required and IV treatment is not possible, intramuscular treatment should be considered

• If an infant or child is receiving prophylactic medication and develops an infection, treatment should be with a different antibiotic, not a higher dose of the same antibiotic.

• Asymptomatic bacteriuria in infants and children should not be treated with antibiotics

Page 33: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• There is no evidence of benefit from treatment

of Asymptomatic Bacteriuria in girls with

normal urinary tracts

Page 34: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

VUR grading

Page 35: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract
Page 36: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

QUESTIONS

Page 37: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Prophylactic Antibiotic

• Since 2006, six RCTs comparing prophylaxis with no

prophylaxis. Data from all six trials were provided,

resulting of 1,091 children;

• No statistically significant benefit could be demonstrated

for prophylaxis in those without VUR or those with grades I

to IV VUR (only five children with grade V were included

in the trials)

Page 38: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract
Page 39: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Prophylactic antibiotics

• Decisions for children following initial febrile UTI should be made on a case-by-case basis

• 2011 AAP does not recommend prophylactic antimicrobials following the first febrile UTI in children 2 to 24 months

• NICE antibiotic prophylaxis should not be routinely recommended following the first UTI, but may be warranted after recurrent UTI

• For children who have no VUR but had a severe or protracted course of illness or have risk factors for recurrence (eg, febrile seizures, prolonged hospitalization, renal abscess, single kidney, bladder and bowel dysfunction), and in whom prevention of any recurrence would be desirable, we discuss the risks and potential benefits of antimicrobial prophylaxis with families

Page 40: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Follow UP; NICE

• Infants and children who do not undergo imaging investigations should not

routinely be followed up

• The way in which the results of imaging will be communicated should be

agreed with the parents

• When results are normal, a follow-up outpatient appointment is not

routinely required

• Infants and children who have recurrent UTI or abnormal imaging results

should be assessed by a paediatric specialist

• Assessment of infants and children with renal parenchymal defects should

include height, weight, blood pressure and routine testing for proteinuria

Page 41: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Follow Up

• Infants and children with a minor, unilateral renal parenchymal defect do not need long-term follow-up unless they have recurrent UTI or family history or lifestyle risk factors for hypertension

• Infants and children who have bilateral renal abnormalities, impaired kidney function, raised blood pressure and/or proteinuria should receive monitoring and appropriate management by a paediatric nephrologist to slow the progression of chronic kidney disease

• Infants and children who are asymptomatic following an episode of UTI should not routinely have their urine re-tested for infection

• Asymptomatic bacteriuria is not an indication for follow-up.

Page 42: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• multidrug resistance as non-susceptibility to at least one

antimicrobial in three or more classes, based on in vitro

antibiotic susceptibility testing

• Extensively drug-resistant (XDR): isolates with

susceptibility to only one or two antimicrobial classes, with

resistance to agents in all remaining categories

• Pan-drug resistance is resistant to all agents in all

antimicrobial classes

Page 43: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

ESBL

• Beta-lactamases: ESBL producers hydrolyse

penicillins, first- to third-generation

cephalosporins and aztreonam but may remain

susceptible to clavulanic acid combinations

(e.g. amoxicillin/clavulanic acid) in vitro .

• The most frequently cited risk factors are:

previous antibiotic use, urinary tract anomalies

previous hospitalization

Page 44: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Natural Course of VUR

• Vesicoureteral reflux improves and resolves

with time. The spontaneous resolution is

higher in grades I and II and less in those

patients with dilated VUR (grades III to V)

Page 45: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

After 5 year

• 80% of grade II

• 46% of ureters with grade III

• 38% of patients with grade IV

• VUR had resolved in 50% of children (no VUR grading

given) at the end of the 2 years follow-up

• Pennisi, saw persistence of grade IV VUR in 52% of

patients on prophylaxis at the end of 4 years of follow-up

Page 46: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

How often does VCUG need to be repeated in a

patient known to have VUR

• VUR grade I and II, since VUR does not get worse with time,

there is no need to repeat the VCUG but to continue

aggressively treating episode(s) of recurrent UTI

• Grade III to V, especially grade IV and V, and knowing that

sterile reflux does not cause renal damage, VCUG may be

repeated every 2 to 3 years to look for spontaneous resolution

Page 47: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• There is evidence that

the vast majority of

novel scarring

takes place within the first

few years of life, but

there is also evidence

• that scarring can occur

at any age (Coulthard et

al., 2002).

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THANK YOU

Page 51: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• Infants and children who have bacteriuria and fever of 38°C or higher should be considered to have acute pyelonephritis/upper urinary tract infection. Infants and children presenting with fever lower than 38°C with loin pain/tenderness and bacteriuria should also be considered to haveacute pyelonephritis/upper urinary tract infection. All other infants and children who have bacteriuria but no systemic symptoms or signs should be considered to have cystitis/lower urinary tract infection

Page 52: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• Recent childhood urinary tract infection (UTI) guidelines presume that few kidney defects can be prevented, and strive to minimise renal tract imaging.

• All published childhood UTI guidelines advise prompt treatment, but none provide target times.

• Treating children’s urinary tract infections in ≤3 days, more than halves the risk of them acquiring kidney scars.

• GPs can halve the kidney scarring rates in young children by active management using a direct-access service.

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Page 54: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

• Suitable urine sample for culture should be obtained before antimicrobials

• A urinalysis helps interpret the results of the urine culture, to distinguish

UTI from asymptomatic bacteruria

• SPA is not recommended unless necessary

• Urine dipstick is slightly less sensitive, but satisfactory if microscopy not

available. Positive LE or nitrites or microscopy positive for WBCs or

bacteria is a positive urinalysis

• Base route on practical consideration, eg, unable to retain oral fluids

• Pure growth of ≥50,000 CFUs/mL of a uropathogen and urinalysis

demonstrating bacteriuria or pyuria

• Sensitivities vary by region and time

• Antimicrobial sensitivities should be used to adjust antimicrobial choice

• Look for anatomic abnormalities that require further evaluation

• Proven UTI, RBUS indications for VCUG should be judged by the

clinician.

• After a second UTI, the risk of grade IV-V VUR, is estimated to be 18%

• Evaluation ideally within 48 h. Early detection and treatment of febrile UTI

may reduce the risk of renal scarring.

Page 55: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

NICE guideline for paediatric UTI

• Aim: To reduce the numbers of referrals and

imaging procedures undertaken as part of the

care of children with UTIs

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Resistance to ampicillin were the highest and nitrofurantoin rates lowest,

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Page 62: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Revised AAP Guideline on UTI in Febrile

Infants and Young Children 2011

2 months infant up to 24 month toddler with unexplained fever

• The recommendations summarized 2012 in American Family Physician article. The new guideline is based on an extensive literature review

Page 63: Urinary Tract Infection...Urinary tract infection In Childhood •Common problem: Risk of UTI is ~5% •1% of boys and 1-3% of girls •May be a marker of an underlying urinary tract

Management of a child with a febrile urinary

tract infection become controversial.

• The old model investigations :

• Ultrasound , DMSA , and a voiding cystourethrogram VCU

or MCUG

• The aim was to identify child with VUR or any uptake

defect on the nuclear images. (old model )

• Children with VUR of any grade were treated with

prophylactic antibiotics.

• All children with a febrile UTI : hospitalized for

intravenous treatment with antibiotics.

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