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UTI in Children NICE Guidelines Mary Conroy. Common condition May present with non specific symptoms Sequelae, heavy burden on NHS.

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Presentation on theme: "UTI in Children NICE Guidelines Mary Conroy. Common condition May present with non specific symptoms Sequelae, heavy burden on NHS."— Presentation transcript:

1 UTI in Children NICE Guidelines Mary Conroy

2 Common condition May present with non specific symptoms Sequelae, heavy burden on NHS

3 Diagnosis < 3 months Fever Vomiting Lethargy Poor feeding/FTT Abdominal pain /jaundice/haematuria/offensive urine

4 Diagnosis > 3 months Preverbal Fever Abdominal/loin pain Vomiting Lethargy FTT Haematuria Offensive urine Verbal Frequency Dysuria Dysfunctional voiding Changes to continence Pain Cloudy/offensive urine

5 When to test urine with symptoms and signs of UTI with unexplained fever of 38°C or higher (test urine after 24 hours at the latest). with an alternative site of infection but who remain unwell (consider urine test after 24 hours at the latest).

6 Collecting the urine sample A clean catch urine sample is the recommended method for urine collection. – use other non-invasive methods such as urine collection pads. – do not use cotton wool balls, gauze or sanitary towels. If other non-invasive methods are not possible: – use a catheter sample or suprapubic aspiration Do not delay treatment if the sample cannot be obtained and the infant or child is unwell

7 Under 3/12 0 refer to paeds 3/12 – 3 years – urgent miscroscopy and culture + Abx or MC&S + Abx

8 Microscopy Pyuria Positive Pyuria Negative Bacteriuria Positive Treat Bacteriuria Negative Treat on clinical grounds No treatment needed

9 Urine dipstick Nitrite Positive Nitrite Negative Leukocyte Positive Treat MC&S Treat on clinical grounds MC&S Leukocyte Negative Treat if fresh sample - MC&S No treatment required

10 Management Under 3/12 refer Upper UTI/Pyelonepritis, consider referral Cef or Augmentin 7-10 days Lower UTI, oral antibiotics 3 days eg trimethoprim, nitrifurantoin, amoxicillin

11 Prevention Hydration Try not to delay voiding Address dysfunctional elimination syndromes and constipation

12 Investigation < 6/12 Typical UTI (responds to Tx 48hr) - US within 6 weeks Atypical UTI/ Recurrent UTI - US during acute infection, DMSA, MCUG

13 6/12 – 3 years Typical UTI – nil Atypical UTI – US during acute infection DMSA Recurrent – US DMSA

14 Over 3 years Typical UTI – Nil Atypical UTI – US acute Recurrent UTI – US DMSA

15 Follow up Refer recurrent UTI and abnormal imaging Renal parenchymal defects – monitor height, weight, BP and proteinuria Long term follow up: bilateral renal abnormalities, impaired renal function, BP, proteinuria under paeds nephrologist to slow progression to CKD

16 Summary Consider UTI in the febrile child Refer <3/12, consider in upper UTI/Atypical UTI Typical UTI > 6/12 – no need for investigation


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