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Parameters developed to Speed UTI Treatment in Children

by Anjanee Sharma on Mar 9 2021 8:37 PM

Parameters developed to Speed UTI Treatment in Children
New research sets up parameters for the number of white blood cells that need to be present in children's urine at different concentrations to be diagnosed as a urinary tract infection (UTI). This could help speed treatment of this condition and prevent potentially lifelong complications. //
UTIs account for about 7% of fevers in children up to 24 months old and are a common cause for emergency room visits. But, Shahid Nadeem, lead investigator, says that since these bacterial infections in infants and toddlers have symptoms similar to other fever-causing conditions, UTIs can be difficult to diagnose.

He adds that a delayed diagnosis can lead to the UTI developing into a serious infection. An instance of lifelong complications is UTI-related kidney scarring associated with chronic kidney disease and hypertension.

Usually, to diagnose a UTI, doctors need to culture a urine sample and wait for it to grow telltale bacteria in a petri dish with nutrients, which can take up to two days, delaying treatment.

Nadeem and other doctors rely on testing urine for a white blood cell-linked protein known as leukocyte esterase (LE), then confirm the presence of white blood cells - a sign of immune activity - by looking for them in urine under a microscope.

The research team searched for and found medical records of 24,171 children (< 24 months) who were brought to the emergency department between January 2012 and December 2017 with a suspected UTI and had both urinalysis and a urine culture. Out of these, 2,003 patients were diagnosed with a UTI.

A urinalysis assesses the urine concentration and the presence of LE and white blood cells. Urine Specific Gravity is the density of urine compared to water - a measurement used instead of concentration.

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With the urine specific gravity and the number of WBCs present, the researchers defined cutoff points for three urine concentration groups:

For low urine concentrations, only three WBCs were needed to suspect a UTI in children,

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For moderate concentrations, six WBCs were needed, and

For high concentrations, eight WBCs were needed.

Nadeem adds that leukocyte esterase remains constant for each of these concentration groups, i.e., it's a good trigger for analyzing urine for the presence of white blood cells.

The number of WBCs can be highly variable in children, and some of this variation could be due to varying urine concentrations. As a result, it's been unknown what WBC number threshold should be used to begin treating a suspected UTI.

Nadeem states, “Knowing how many white blood cells tend to be present in urine samples at different concentrations in children with UTIs could help physicians start treating these infections before they receive urine culture results, giving relief to patients and their parents and preventing complications.”



Source-Eurekalert


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