Title: Urinary Tract Infections in Children
1Urinary Tract Infections in Children
- Dr. Rim El-Rifai
- Consultant Paediatrician
- QMHC
2Outline of talk
- Cases
- Introduction and definitions
- Evaluation of UTI
- Management
- Summary
37 year old girl
- Initial referral to investigate secondary
enuresis, - had a positive urine for UTI
- Main concern nocturnal enuresis
- Dysuria and dark offensive urine
- History of PUOs for 2 days at a time
- No abnormal physical findings on examination
4investigations
- Ultrasound scan KUB
- Small capacity bladder, dilated distal ureter and
urothelial thickening in Lt renal pelvis and
large left kidney on USS - DMSA
- left Duplex with scarring of upper pole- has
patient had MCU?
53 weeks old girl
- Initial presentation to AE vomiting
- Treated with IV ABs
- 2 urine samples had mixed growth but gt 100 WBC on
SPA - FH brother had pyloric stenosis and UTI when 4
mo old - TMP ran out after 2 weeks- did not get
prescription
6Investigations
- KUB USS normal
- Abdo. USS Pyloric Stenosis
- MCUG and DMSA awaited
76 years old girl
- Referred by GP for frequency and day time wetting
at school - Urine showed no WBC but grew Enterococcus
- treated as UTI with oral TMP
- History frequency and urgency but not unwell or
febrile - Further urine dipstick and KUB normal
- On questioning urine collected in make shift jar
at home
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9What is a UTI?
- An inflammatory response of urothelium to
bacterial invasion that is usually associated
with bacteriuria and pyuria - i.e. MSU shows
- WBC gt 10
- Pure growth of organisms gt 107
10Bacteriuria
- Presence of bacteria in the urine in numbers
exceeding the numbers caused by contamination
from skin, urethra - Not a contaminant from the skin, vagina, prepuce
- Collection technique sensitive
- May be asymptomatic
11Pyuria
- Presence of white blood cells (WBCs) in the urine
- Generally indicative of an inflammation of the
urothelium as a response to bacterial invasion
12Sites of origin of UTI
- Acute pyelonephritis
- acute bacterial infection of the kidney
- Fever, rigors
- Flank pain
- Bacteriuria and pyuria
- Unwell child, usually febrile
13Sites of origin of UTI
- Bacterial Cystitis Inflammation of the bladder
- Abrupt onset of dysuria
- Frequency
- Urgency
- Suprapubic pain
- Non-bacterial cystitis chemical
14Sites of origin of UTI
- Urethritis
- Inflammation of the urethra
- Symptoms difficult to differentiate from cystitis
- Seen in girls with vulvovaginitis
15UTI in Childhood
- Features commonly non-specific
- Associated with anatomical Urological
abnormalities - Difficulty in obtaining meaningful urine samples
- Tendency to cause renal scarring
- May lead to End Stage Renal Disease and
Hypertension in adult life
16UTI in Childhood
- Always regarded as complicated
- Treatment very effective
- Recurrence is frequent following first UTI
- 40 in females,
- 32 in males
17Childhood UTI Epidemiology
- Prevalence is age and sex dependent
- Overall F gt M
- In 2-10 of children 2 mo 2 yrs of age with
unexplained fevers
18Incidence age
- UTI diagnosed in 3 of prepubertal girls, and 1
boys - In children less than 1 year
- M (2.7) gt F (0.7)
19Incidence sex
- Most male infections under 3 months
- 10 times more common in uncircumcised males
- After first year 0.08 in boys
- 3-4 in girls until 6 years
- Up to 8 of girls are affected by UTI
20Access of bacteria
- Haematogenous spread with bacteraemia in first 12
weeks - After 3 months by ascending seeding through
urethra
21Pathogens
- Most common E. Coli
- Other
- Proteus spp (in boys)
- Klebsiella
- Pseudomonas
- Enterococcus
- Staphylococcus epidermidis
- Staphylococcus aureus
22Predisposing factors
23Most commonly
- Constipation
- Vesico-ureteric reflux
- Dysfunctional voiding- poor emptying
- Infected periurethral area
- Urinary stasis PUJ, VUJ obstruction
- Ureteral duplication and ectopic ureters
24Causes for recurrent UTI
- Vesico-ureteric reflux
- Urinary stasis, constipation
- Infected periurethral area
- Infected atrophic kidney
- Ureteral duplication and ectopic ureters
- Infected urachal cysts, infected ureteral stump
- Foreign bodies
- Stones
25Vesico-Ureteric Reflux
26Vesico-ureteric Reflux
- VUR demonstrated in 1-2 of healthy children
- More prevalent in infants and young children
- An intermittent phenomenon
- Increased detection rate due to antenatal
screening - Can be provoked by elevated voiding pressures
27Vesico-ureteric Reflux and UTI
- Reported in 30-50 of children with UTI
- A large number still present after their first
UTI - Reflux nephropathy is the cause for end-stage
renal failure in 3-25 of children and 10-15 of
adults
28Evaluation of UTI
29Presentation/Evaluation
- History in infants and toddlers
- Fever,
- irritability
- Poor weight gain (FTT)
- Smelly urine
- Abdominal Pain
- Dysuria, frequency, urgency
- Haematuria
- Enuresis and dysfunctional voiding
- Constipation, thread worm infection, sore vulva
30Presentation/Evaluation
- History in children
- Fever
- Abdominal Pain
- (Flank/loin pain)
- Dysuria, frequency, urgency
- Haematuria
- smelly urine
- Enuresis and dysfunctional voiding
- Constipation, thread worm infection, sore vulva
31History/ evaluation
- History in Lower urinary tract infection
- irritability
- Abdominal Pain
- Dysuria, frequency, urgency
- Haematuria
- smelly urine
- Enuresis and dysfunctional voiding
- Constipation, thread worm infection, sore vulva
32History in enuresis/ incontinence
- Nocturnal symptoms
- Timing and onset of enuresis
- Frequency of wetting (wet nights/week)
- Times of wetting at night (one/several)
- Amount of urine passed (small/large)
- Daytime symptoms
- Urinary frequency (frequent/infrequent)
- Urgency and urge incontinence
- Quality of stream
- Complete emptying?
- Posturing (Vincent curtsey)
33Evaluation
- Physical examination full examination including
- Growth
- BP
- genitalia
- Urine test
- imaging
34Neuropathic Bladder
Sacral Agenesis
35Laboratory assessment
- Urine dipstick for Nitrites, Leukocytes
- Urinalysis (clean catch sample)
- Direct microscopy and gram staining
- Culture and sensitivities
36AAP and RCPCH guidelines for diagnosis of UTI in
infants and young children
- UTI should be ruled out in infants and children
assessed to be sufficiently ill to require
antibiotics treatment - Diagnosis of UTI requires a culture of urine
37Imaging
38Urinary Tract Imaging
- Plain Abdominal x-ray
- Ultrasound- any age
- Micturating cystourethrogram lt 1 year
- Nuclear Imaging- any age
- IVU
- CT scan
39Ultrasound
- Renal size and position
- Scars, corticomedullary differentiation, cysts,
masses, calcification, calculi - Pelvis and calyceal size and appearance
- Pelvis-calyceal dilatation, urothelial thickening
- Ureters
- Dilatation, urothelial thickening, calculi
- Bladder
- outline, wall thickness, volume, residual volume
40DMSA
- Renal cortical morphology
- Scars
- Overall function
- Differential function
- No information on VUR
41MAG 3
- Quantify renal excretory function
- Flow imaging
- PUJ obstruction
- Indirect cystogram
42MCUG Bilateral VUR
DMSA Left renal scarring
43Imaging of urinary tract after first febrile UTI
in Young children
- USS during acute illness of limited value
- MCUG useful in young age group where AB
prophylaxis considered to reduce re-infection and
renal scarring - DMSA at presentation and 6 months later
identifies renal scarring
Pittsburgh SM N E J M, Jan 2003
44Complications of UTI
45Complications
- Acute
- Systemic illness, sepsis, renal abscess
- Short term
- Renal scarring, recurrence of UTI
- Long term
- Hypertension
- End-stage renal disease (overall 0.5-5 of ESRD
on dialysis have reflux nephropathy)
46Renal scarring and VUR International Reflux
Study in Children
- 5 yr follow up 302 patients (10 yrs in 5/8
European centres)- serial IVU and DMSA - Grade III, IV, V VUR and symptomatic UTI
- Medical vs Surgical treatment of VUR
- New scars in 21 surgical and 19 medical
- New scars mostly in children lt 5years old
- New scars more frequent in Grade IV
- New scars in 2 females gt 5 years
- Olbing H et al, Ped Nephrol, Oct 2003
47Complications of UTI in Children
- Hypertension
- Pyelonephritic scarring is the most common cause
for hypertension in childhood - Prevalence of hypertension independent of the
degree of scarring
48Treatment
49E. Coli Resistance trends
- Ampicillin 39-45
- Trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole 14-31
- Nitrofurantoin 1.8-16
- Fluoroquinolones (Ciprofloxacin) 0.7-10
- Mazzuli T, J Urol 2002
50Drugs for Treatment
- TMP 4 mg/kg BD for 7-10 days
- Cephalosporins (Cefuroxime, Cephalexin)
- Gentamicin
- Ciprofloxacin
- Ampicillin?
- Nitrofurantoin (over 3 mon)?
51Duration of treatment
- Uncomplicated UTI gt 5 days is associated with
higher cure rates - Tran D et al, meta-analysis of 1279 patients
- J Pediatr 2001
- In Children lt 2years of age 7-14 days
- AAP, Pediatrics 1999 and RCPCH appraisal
52Drugs for prophylaxis
- Trimethoprim 2 mg/kg nocte
- Cephalexin 12.5 mg/kg (up to 125 mg) nocte
- Nitrofurantoin (over 3 mon) 1 mg/kg nocte
53Cessation of prophylaxis
- By age 4 years
- When urinary continence achieved and infection
free - Safe in patients in whom VUR fails to resolve
- Thompson et al J Urol 2001
54Surgery
- Anti-reflux open procedures 95-98 success
- Endoscopic subureteric injections 75-90 success
- Teflon- no longer approved by FDA (success
60-84) - Collagen
- Macroplastique
- Deflux (Dextranomer/hyaluronic acid copolymer)
70 success - When?
- Breakthrough UTI
- Persistence of VUR
- Parental preference
55Treatment Bladder Retraining
- Aims at increasing functional bladder capacity
and reduction in residual volume - 2-3 hourly voiding
- Double voiding
- Increasing retention capacity
- Isolated success in continence rate 35
56Prevention
57Breast feeding
- Lactoferrin and oligosaccharides act as analogues
for microbial receptors - Prevents mucosal attachment
- Lactoferrin can kill bacteria, viruses and fungi
58Prevention
- Healthy voiding pattern
- Avoidance of constipation
- Avoidance of local colonization
- Circumcision?
- Cranberry juice?
- Probiotics?
59Points to remember
- Accurate diagnosis of UTI
- Low threshold to investigate in younger children
(lt4 years) - Appropriate treatment of acute events
- Consider other problems when managing UTI
60Points to remember
- The need to recognize the relationship between
- VUR
- Recurrent UTIs
- Voiding dysfunction
- Renal scarring
- Treatment should target each factor
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