Title: Nylon panties (also biker shorts, leotards, bathing suits
1Uti in children
2Introduction
- Pediatric UTIs often signal an underlying
genitourinary tract abnormality - Can lead to renal scarring with resultant
hypertension and renal failure - Difficult to diagnose because symptoms are
non-specific in this age group and testing is
often invasive
3Pediatric UTIs Epidemiology
- Prevalence
- Girls6.5-8
- Boys2-3
- Uncircumcised boys have a 5-20 X increase in UTIs
vs circumcised boys - Occurs in about 7 of children lt2 who present
with fever without a source
4Epidemiology (continued)
- Incidence of vesicoureteral reflux (VUR) is 1 in
children lt 2 yoa. - 50 of kids lt1 yoa with UTI have VUR
- Early renal scarring is nearly twice as common in
this age group. - Incidence of scarring increases with each
subsequent UTI - Scarring occurs in 5-38 of febrile UTIs.
5Figure 1Prevalence of VUR by age. Plotted are
the prevalencesreported in 54 studies of urinary
tract infections inchildren (references in
Technical Report).
Pediatrics 1999 103 843-852
6Figure 2Relationship between renal scarring and
number ofurinary tract infections.16
Pediatrics 1999 103 843-852
7UTI Classiffication
- Classification
- Upper tract infection
- Acute pyelonephritis- fever, bacteriuria,
systemic symptoms - Lower tract infection
- Urethritis
- Cystitis
- Voiding symptoms, little or no fever, no systemic
symptoms
8Clinical Presentation
- Age and gender dependent
- 0 - 2 months
- Fever
- 2 mo. 2 y/o
- Fever (gt38 C)
- Irritability
- Vomiting and Diarrhea
- Decrease appetite
- Between 1-2 y/o crying on urination, foul
smelling odor
9Clinical Presentation
- 2 y/o 6 y/o
- Systemic symptoms
- Fever
- Flank or back pain
- Urgency, urinary incontinence, dysuria
- Suprapubic or abdominal pain
- Foul smelling odor
- gt 6 y/o and adolescents
- Same as above
10Urethritis
- In female infants
- Part of a diaper dermatitis
- In adolescent girls and boys
- Presenting sign of STD
- In pre-school and school age girls
- Part of non-specific vulvovaginitis
- Generally environmental
- Bubble bath
- Nylon panties (also biker shorts, leotards,
bathing suits) - Poor hygiene (not wiping, wiping back to front)
- Overzealous hygiene
- Use of baby powder, perfumes
11Symptoms of urethritis
- Dysuria
- Reluctance to void
- Perineal discomfort, erythema
- May be associated with vaginal irritation and
erythema in girls - In older boys, urethral discharge
- In adolescent girls associated with PID symptoms
12Cystitis
- Afebrile usually
- Frequency
- Enuresis
- Dysuria
- Reluctance to void
13Pyelonephritis
- Usually associated with fever and systemic signs
2 renal parenchymal inflammation - Older children
- Flank pain or abdominal pain
- Younger children
- Fever, irritability, vomiting, poor feeding
14Pyelonephritis - Significance
- EACH infection results in scar formation and
reduced renal function - After diabetes mellitus and collagen vascular
disease, undetected renal disease and untreated
childhood UTI may be responsible for - A large of portion of ESRD in adults
- A huge need for dialysis and transplantation
15Pyelonephritis - Significance
- Untreated childhood UTI responsible for
- Hypertension
- Impaired kidney function
- Complications of pregnancy
16Causes and course of UTI
17Risk Factors
- Age lt1 year
- Female gender
- Uncircumcised males
- Constipation
- Voiding dysfunction
- Improper wiping
- Genitourinary abnormalities
- Vesicoureteral reflux
- Obstruction
- Colonization with virulent E. Coli
18Signs and Symptoms Children 2 months to 2 years
- Feverusually unexplained
- Vomiting and/or diarrhea
- Abdominal Pain
- Failure to thrive
- Malodorous urine
- Crying on urination
19Signs and Symptoms Children gt2
- Fever
- Vomiting and/or diarrhea
- Abdominal pain
- Malodorous urine
- Frequency and/or urgency
- Dysuria
- New incontinence
20Summary
- Urinary tract infections are a common cause of
fever without a source in children lt2 and can
lead to renal scarring, HTN or ESRD. Rapid
treatment is essential. - Symptoms are non-specific and thus a high level
of suspicion is required - Urine culture is required for diagnosis, and
should be obtained by catheterization or SPA when
child is ill or infection is suspected - Treatment requires a 7-14d course of antibiotics
- Prophylactic abx are required after initial
treatment - All Children lt2 require 2 imaging studies after
initial UTI
21References
- Committee on Quality Improvement, Subcommittee on
Urinary Tract Infection. The diagnosis,
treatment, and evaluation of the initial urinary
tract infection in febrile infants and young
children. Pediatrics 1999 103843-852 - Layton, KL. Diagnosis and Management of Pediatric
Urinary Tract Infections. Clinics in Family
Practice 2003 5 2 - Chon DH, Frank CL, Shortliffe LM. Pediatric
Urinary Tract Infections. Pediatric Clinics of
North America 2001 48 1441-1459 - Linderd KA, Shortliffe LM. Evaluation and
management of pediatric urinary tract infections.
Urologic Clinics of North America 1999 26
719-728 - McCollough M, Sharieff G. Marx Rosens Emergency
Medicine Concepts and Clinical Practice, 5th
ed.2002 2327-2334 - Acute Urinary Tract Infections Clinical Effective
Committee. Evidence based clinical practice
guideline for patients 6 years of age or less
with a first time acute urinary tract infection.
Cincinnati (OH) Childrens Hospital Medical
Center 1999 1-14
22long-term antibiotic treatment for preventing
recurrent urinary tract infections (UTI) in
children
- Patient groups
- Infants of 1 year
- Girls and boys
- Recurrent UTI (no abnormalities)
- Mild VUR (grade I and II)
- Options
- Long-term low dose antibiotics (Cochrane review)
- (Trimethoprim, Nitrofurantoin, Cotrimoxazole)
- Intermittent treatment of UTIs
- Time horizon
- 3 years of long-term antibiotics and follow-up to
end stage renal disease - NHS perspective
23Model Structure for UTI
24The evidence
- Effectiveness
- Existing reviews (variable quality)
- Meta analysis, Multiple parameter synthesis
- Probabilistic trial based model
- Natural history
- Epidemiological studies
- Pooled trial baselines
- Registry studies
- Clinical judgement
- Quality of life
- Published studies
- Survey
- Costs
- Published studies
- Published unit costs and dosage (BNF, PSSRU,
CIPFA)
25Antenatal Period
- The most common cause is physiologic dilation.
- Metanephric urine production begins at 8 weeks,
even before ureteral canalization is complete. - Transient obstruction with hydronephrosis occurs.
26Embryology
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29Pathophysiology
- Anatomic and functional processes interrupts the
flow of urine. - There is a rise in ureteral pressure causing
stretching and dilation if pressures continue to
rise, leads to decline in renal blood flow and
GFR. - When significant obstruction is persistent, it
affects nephrogenic tissue and results in varying
degrees of cystic dysplasia and renal impairment.
30Grading of Severity of Hydronephrosis
31Most Common Causes in Neonates
- Ureteropelvic Junction Obstruction
- Ureterovesical Junction Obstruction
- Posterior Urethral Valves
- Eagle-Barrett Syndrome (a.k.a. Prune Belly
Syndrome) - Vesicoureteral Reflux
- Ureterocele
32Treatment for UPJ Pyeloplasty
33Diagnosis
34Urine Collection
- Clean Catch acceptable for toilet trained
children (wearing underwear or pull-ups) - Ensure cleansing with antiseptic towelette
- Catheterized specimen in diapered children
- Suprapubic bladder tap in lt6 month old child is
guaranteed sterile
35Leukocyte Esterase
- Has to accumulate in urine
- Insufficient accumulation possible in small
infants who void frequently - Infants lt3 months old may not have mature enough
immune system to induce leukocytes in urine
(beware neutropenia on CBC)
36Nitrites
- By-products of E. coli and other lactose
fermenters (glucose digestion) - Insufficient accumulation possible in small
infants who void frequently - Insufficient accumulation possible in older child
during the day and in older patient who has
significant frequency - If positive, highly suggestive of UTI (high
specificity)
37Microscopy
- gt10 WBC/hpf on spun urine
- Bacteria on unspun urine are common unless
catheterized specimen - Gram stain is very helpful on spun urine
- Standard UA plus gram stain is enhanced UA
38Urine Culture
- gt100,000 cfu per mL on any culture
- gt10,000 cfu per mL on cath specimen
- ANY bacterial growth on bladder tap (at least
1,000 cfu/mL)
39Sensitivity and Specificity of Components of the
UA
Sensitivity (Range)
Specificity (Range)
Test
Leukocyte esterase Nitrite Leukocyte esterase
or nitrite positive Microscopy white blood
cells Microscopy bacteria Leukocyte esterase
or nitrite or Microscopy positive
83 (67.94) 53 (15-82) 93 (90-100) 73
(32-100) 81 (16-99) 99.8 (99.100)
78 (64-92) 98 (90-100) 72 (58-91) 81
(45-98) 83 (11-100) 70 (60-92)
40Urine Cultures
- Held for 48 h but usually positive at 24 h for
true UTI - Requires another day for ID of organism
- May require another day for sensitivities
- If contains skin flora (S. epi., S. aureus or
a-strep.) considered contamination secondary to
poor specimen collection
41Diagnosis
- Urinalysis
- Can be obtained by most convenient means if
infant is not ill - UTI CANNOT be diagnosed with UA alone
- If suspicious UA, the Urine Culture must be
obtained via SPA or catheter specimen - If UA does not suggest UTI, it is reasonable to
follow child clinically
42Pediatrics 1999 103 843-852
43Diagnosis
- Urine Culture
- MUST be collected via catheter or SPA
- UTI CANNOT be diagnosed from a bag specimen
- Diagnosis of UTI requires Urine Culture
- LOE--Strong
44Urine Collection Suprapubic Aspirate
- Gold standard - gt99 specificity
- Positive culture any number of g- bacilli or
gt3000 CFU of g cocci
45Urine Collection Transuretheral Catherization
- gt105 CFU - 95 specificity
- 104 105 CFU infection is likely
- 103 104 CFU Suspicious
- lt103 CFU infection unlikely
46treatment
47Treatment
- May initiate treatment either orally or
parenterally - Admit and use parenteral antibiotics if toxic,
dehydrated or unable to take PO - Choices
- TMP/SMX
- Cephalosporin
- Amoxicillin (check local resistance)
48Treatment--continued
- Improvement should be seen in 24-48 hours
- If not having expected clinical response in 2
days, re-culture, consider changing antibiotics
and do imaging studies - Complete 7-14 day course of antibiotics
- 14 days should be given for those that were ill
with clinical evidence of pyelonephritis
49Prophylaxis
- After completion of initial antibiotics, children
should be give a prophylactic dose of antibiotics
until imaging studies complete - Antibiotic should have high urinary excretion and
low serum and fecal levels, thus minimizing the
development of resistance.
50Imaging
- Needs to be performed in ALL children lt2 years
old with initial UTI - Need to perform at least 2 studies to image the
upper and lower urinary tracts - Acute imaging only necessary when appropriate
clinical response is not achieved within 2 days
51Ultrasound
- Should be done on all infants lt 2yoa after their
initial UTI - Helps to detect hydronephrosis and ureteral
dilation - Has replaced IVP
- Need additional study to evalute VUR
- Is not as sensitive as renal cortical
scintigraphy (DMSA) for detecting inflamation and
scarring
52Voiding Cystourethrography (VCUG)
- Used to identify and grade reflux
- Also evaluates the urethra and bladder for
abnormalities important for boys who may have
posterior urethral valves and girls with voiding
dysfunction - Radionuclide cystography (RNC) can also
evaluate reflux, but does not delineate the lower
tract anatomy well. Can be used for follow-up
exams as has low ratiation dose
53Renal Cortical Scintigraphy (DMSA)
- Very sensitive for evaluating acute inflammation
from pyelonephritis as well as renal scarring - Role in clinical management is still unclear
54Treatment
- No short course therapy for small children
- No short course therapy for males
- Empiric therapy is directed at organisms and
adjusted for age. - Choose narrowest spectrum allowable considering
host factors - Adjust therapy when sensitivities available
55IV antibiotics-Indications
- Any person of any age who appears clinically
toxic or who has neutropenia - Infants lt1 mo until bacteremia, sepsis,
meningitis ruled out - Children unable to tolerate oral antibiotics
- Immunocompromised patients
56Antibiotic choice
- Neonates
- Ampicillin plus a second antibiotic (usually
gentamycin or cefotaxime) to cover for GBS,
Listeria, as well as gram negative organisms - S. aureus and S. epi. can cause hematogenous
pyelonephritis (in children instrumented ET
tube,central lines, etc) - Vancomycin may be indicated for toxic patients or
those unresponsive to initial therapy
57Therapy
- Cefixime (Suprax) oral is as effective as
parenteral ceftriaxone - Cefpodoxime (Vantin)
- Bad tasting
- 10 mg/kg/day
- Fluoroquinolones are expensive and off label in
pedi
58Bacterial virulence Bacterial spectrum at the
Ist Dept. of Pediatrics, in 2002-2003
- N7850 ()
- E. coli 49
- Enterococcus faecalis 13
- Proteus indol neg. 10
- Klebsiella 7
- Pseudomonas spp 7
- Enterobacter spp 6
- Proteus indol pos 3
- Staphylococcus 3
- Other 2
59Sensitive host
- Age related factors
- Anatomy (short urethra, phymosis and adhesio
cellularis preputii et labia minora, diaper) - colonization
- Immunological susceptibility
- Mucosal barrier
- Inherited/acquired
- immunresponse
- Inherited/acquired
- Ex IgA deficiency, P1 blood group
60Sensitive host
- Anatomical malformations
- obstruction
- VUR
- meningomyelokele
- prune-belly syndrome
- Stone disease, etc
61Age-related incidence of UTI
62Management of UTI
63Prognosis
64UTI Controversy 1Antibiotic Prophylaxis
- Indications
- ? grade 1 VUR
- frequent UTI recurrences
- Problems
- Pt Rxd with antibiotic prophylaxis
- Increased infection with Proteus and Enterobacter
- pseudomonas and Candida increased in children
with urogenital abnormalities - Drug toxicity and sensitivities
- Antimicrobial choices (qhs better)
- TMP-SMX or Nitrofurantoin (GI disturbance)
- Keflex if lt 3 months
- Quinolones in some circumstances
65Posterior Urethral Valves
- Abnormal congenital mucosal folds that are thin
membranes impeding bladder drainage. - Most common obstructive urethral lesion in male
newborns found at the distal prostatic urethra. - Incidence is approxly 1 in 8,000 males.
- Approxly 50 have reflux.
- VCUG is the modality of choice.
66Radiographic signs of PUV
- distended prostatic urethra
- valve leaflets
- bladder and/or bladder neck hypertrophy
- diverticula
- narrow stream in the penile urethra
- incomplete emptying of the bladder
67Treatment of PUV
- Transurethral valve ablation, vesicostomy or
upper tract diversion - Urethral stricture is a common complication
- Fetal intervention carries a high risk with
mortality rate of 43 - ESRD, renal insufficiency and chronic renal
failure are long-term consequences
68 - 30 of boys with posterior urethral valves whose
symptoms present in infancy are at risk for
progressive renal insufficiency.
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70PUV, 2 months , MCU
71PUV, 2months
72- Mcu done for suspected PUV
73- 9 months old child with dribbling of urine and
difficulty in passing urine - ?PUV
- MCU done
- Uroprophylaxis suggested
- Told by another Doc not necessary
- Came with high grade fever after 1 month
- UTI
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75Vesicoureteral Reflux
- Retrograde propulsion of urine into the upper
urinary tract during bladder contraction. - Primary reflux is caused by attenuation of the
trigone and the contiguous intravesical ureteral
musculature. - May be caused by the ectopic insertion of the
ureter into the bladder wall resulting in a
shorter intravesicular ureter, which acts as an
incompetent valve during urination.
76- The ratio of the submucosal tunnel length to the
ureteral diameter is the primary factor
determining the effectiveness of the normal valve
mechanism. - It is normally 51, and in those with reflux it
is 1.41. - The intramural length increases from 0.5 cm at
birth to 1.3 cm by 12 years of age. - Duplication of the collecting system and
ureteroceles should also be considered.
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78Some clinical facts about VUR
- It is genetic.
- Occurs in about 30 of first-degree relatives.
- 1/3 of children with a urinary tract infection
has reflux on VCUG. - Primary reflux tends to resolve over time as
intravesical segment elongates with growth.
79Grading of Vesicoureteral Reflux
80VUR Grading
Grade I
Grade III
Grade II
Prognosis - 5 adults Scarring -
5-50 Screening UTI
Grade IV
Grade V
81Prognosis
- Kidney is most susceptible to scarring in the
first year of life and at the time of first upper
tract infection. - Scars less frequently develop after the age of 5.
- VUR and scarring lead to hypertension,
progressive renal insufficiency and failure.
- Resolves spontaneously before adolescence in
- 90 of Gr. 1 reflux
- 80 of Gr. 2
- 50 of Gr. 3
- 10 of Gr. 4
- 0 in Grade 5 reflux
82Treatment
- Observation
- Medical treatment of infections
- Surgical treatment
- significant hydroureteronephrosis
- indicated if impossible to keep urine sterile and
reflux persists - acute pyelonephritis occurs
- evidence of increasing renal damage
83VUR
84MCU
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86Endoscopic submucosal injection
87Endoscopic submucosal injection
88Bacterial virulence
- Virulencefactors that enable bacteria to invade
the urinary tract - Surface antigenes
- O lipopolysacharides with endotoxin properties.
Induces fever, local inflammation - K, (capsular) antigene, prevents phagocytosis
- P fimbriae bind to glycolipid receptors of the
P blood group family - A number of further factors not routinely checked
89Bacterial virulence
- Pyelonephritis 3-4 (known) virulence factors
- Cystitis 0-2 factors
- CAVE OBSTURCTION !! MALFORMATION !!