Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult (746 page)

Read Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult Online

Authors: Jeffrey J. Schaider,Adam Z. Barkin,Roger M. Barkin,Philip Shayne,Richard E. Wolfe,Stephen R. Hayden,Peter Rosen

Tags: #Medical, #Emergency Medicine

BOOK: Rosen & Barkin's 5-Minute Emergency Medicine Consult
2.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
DIAGNOSIS
ALERT

UTIs in children may be difficult to diagnose without lab confirmation.

SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
History
  • Often nonspecific
  • Neonates:
    • Manifestations of sepsis
    • Feeding difficulties
    • Irritability, listlessness
    • Fever, hypothermia
  • 1 mo–3 yr of age:
    • Fever
    • Irritability
    • Vomiting, diarrhea
    • Abdominal pain
    • Poor feeding, failure to thrive
  • Hematuria
  • In girls <2 yr, an increased risk is associated with those having ≥3 factors (<12 mo old, white, temperature ≥39°C, absence of other source of fever, fever ≥2 days)
  • Children >3 yr of age:
    • Dysuria
    • Frequency
    • Enuresis
    • New onset of urinary incontinence
    • Pain: Abdominal, suprapubic, back, costovertebral angle (CVA)
    • Fever
    • Hematuria
    • Malodorous cloudy urine
    • Systemic toxicity: High fever and chills with CVA tenderness
  • Complications:
    • Recurrent UTI
    • Pyelonephritis
    • Chronic renal failure:
      • Scarring probably may be reduced by early detection and intervention
    • Perinephric abscess
    • Bacteremia/sepsis
    • Urolithiasis
Physical-Exam
  • Vital signs, esp. temperature and blood pressure
  • Toxicity
  • Growth parameters
  • Abdomen: Tenderness, esp. CVA pain
  • GU: Genitalia
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
  • UA with microscopic RBC and WBC counts and Gram stain for bacteria:
    • UA alone has low diagnostic sensitivity in infants.
    • Causes of pyuria besides UTI include chemical (bubble bath) or physical (masturbation) irritation, dehydration, renal tuberculosis, trauma, acute glomerulonephritis, respiratory infections, appendicitis, pelvic infection, and gastroenteritis.
    • Leukocyte esterase correlates with presence of pyuria.
    • Positive nitrite test indicates presence of bacteria capable of fixing nitrate. False-negative tests common
    • Gram stain of urinary sediment is more reliable than dipstick methods of diagnosis and superior to traditional UA.
    • Up to 80% of UAs in neonates with documented UTIs may be normal.
  • Urine culture:
    • Specimen should be cultured within 30 min or refrigerated.
    • False-negative results may be caused by dilution, improper culture medium, recent antimicrobial therapy, fastidious organisms, bacteriostatic agent in urine, and complete obstruction of ureter.
  • Clean-catch and bag specimens
    • Clean catch in cooperative male children
    • Plastic bag collection adequate for UA (70% contamination rate).
    • Clean the perineum (females) and glans (males) before application.
    • Can be used as a screening tool to rule out an infection if patient is not placed on antibiotics empirically and follow-up culture possible if the initial assessment is suggestive of infection.
  • Catheterization is the preferred technique to obtain urine because contamination is common with bag collection and clean catch:
    • Bladder catheterization:
      • Acceptable in all infants
      • Higher success rate than suprapubic aspiration
      • Aseptic technique essential
      • Discarding the 1st 1–2 mL of urine before collecting specimen reduces contamination.
  • Suprapubic aspiration is used on rare occasion and does provide a good specimen:
    • Most useful in infants
    • Full bladder optimal
    • Uncommonly used
    • Ultrasound may be useful adjunctive measure to improve yield.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
  • CBC and blood culture for young children with fever or nonspecific symptoms and no source on exam. Consider additional evaluation as appropriate.
  • Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine:
    • Check if there is dehydration, pyelonephritis, or recurrent infection.
Imaging
  • Children requiring radiologic evaluation:
    • Infants <3 mo of age
    • Males (increased association with anomaly) with 1st UTI
    • Clinical signs and symptoms consistent with pyelonephritis
    • Clinical evidence of renal disease
    • Some suggest that girls <3 yr of age with a 1st UTI should be studied.
    • Females >3 yr of age
    • 1st UTI in patients who have a family history of UTIs, abnormal voiding pattern, poor growth, HTN, urinary tract anomalies, or failure to respond promptly to therapy
    • 2nd UTI
  • Voiding cystoureterogram (VCUG):
    • UTI is often associated with VUR and other genitourinary abnormalities and identified by VCUG. The importance of identifying VUR has been questioned.
  • Renal/bladder ultrasound (US):
    • Ultrasonography is useful in excluding obstructive lesion and identifying children with solitary/ectopic kidney and some patients with moderate renal damage/scarring:
      • Renal/bladder US is indicated to identify anatomic abnormalities. Should be done in children <2 yr with 1st febrile UTI, children with recurrent febrile UTIs, children with a UTI and family history of GU disease, poor growth, or hypertension as well as those children who do not respond as anticipated to antibiotics.
      • Nuclear cystogram (DMSA) may be substituted for VCUG in females. Its role is being clarified.
    • Further evaluation with nuclear medicine studies depends upon the grade of VUR and response to treatment
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
  • Infection:
    • Vulvovaginitis
    • Viral cystitis
    • Urethritis (
      Neisseria gonorrhoeae or Chlamydia trachomatis
      )
    • Glomerulonephritis
    • Appendicitis
  • Trauma:
    • Chemical irritation/cystitis
    • Perineal
    • Sexual abuse
    • Genitourinary
    • Masturbation
    • Foreign body
  • Nephrolithiasis
  • Diabetes
TREATMENT
INITIAL STABILIZATION/THERAPY
  • Treat infants <3 mo old presumptively for sepsis if febrile and/or toxic until blood and other appropriate cultures are final.
  • Airway intervention for septic/acidotic infants with depressed respiratory drive
  • Bolus of 20 mL/kg 0.9% NS for dehydration, hypovolemia, or sepsis; may repeat
ED TREATMENT/PROCEDURES
  • Initiate IV antibiotics in all febrile infants <3 mo with UTI:
    • Ampicillin and gentamicin in neonates
    • Cephalosporins after 4–8 wk of age
  • Outpatient oral antibiotic for 10–14 days for children discharged. Should reflect local resistance patterns. Once sensitivity is known, antibiotic may need to be changed:
    • Amoxicillin
    • Amoxicillin/clavulanate
    • Cephalexin
    • Trimethoprim–sulfamethoxazole (TMP–SMX)
    • Many suggest 3rd-generation cephalosporin (cefixime, cefdinir) as 1st-line drug in treatment of children without GU anomaly because of changing resistance patterns. Oral therapy is generally adequate although close follow-up is essential to monitor clinical response and sensitivity of the etiologic organism.
    • Recent UTI may provide information related to sensitivities in children with recurrent UTIs
    • Length of treatment in children with afebrile UTI may be shortened to 5 days in children >2 yr. The short course is still not generally recommended in children with febrile UTI.
MEDICATION
First Line
  • Amoxicillin: 40 mg/kg/24 h PO q8h
  • Amoxicillin/clavulanate: 40 mg/kg/24 h PO q8h
  • Ampicillin: 100 mg/kg/24 h IV q6h
  • Cefdinir 14 mg/kg/24 h PO QD
  • Cefixime 16 mg/kg/24 h PO on 1st day followed by 8 mg/kg/24 h PO QD
  • Ceftriaxone: 50–75 mg/kg/24 h q12–24h IV or IM
  • Cephalexin: 50 mg/kg/24 h PO q6–12h
  • Gentamicin: 2.5 mg/kg/dose IV q8h if full-term and age >7 days; 2.5 mg/kg/dose IV q12h if full-term and age 0–7 days (special dosing regimens in infants <36 wk postconceptual age)
  • TMP–SMX (Bactrim or Septra suspension): 5 mL liquid (of 40/200 per 5 mL) per 10 kg per dose PO BID
FOLLOW-UP
DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
  • Infants <3 mo
  • Dehydration
  • Ill appearance/toxicity/sepsis
  • Suspected pyelonephritis
  • Urinary obstruction
  • Vomiting, inability to retain medications
  • Failure to respond to outpatient therapy
  • Immunocompromised patient
  • Renal insufficiency
  • Foreign body (indwelling catheter)
  • Pregnant patient
Discharge Criteria
  • Sufficiently hydrated
  • Low risk for sepsis or meningitis
  • Nontoxic
  • Able to take oral antibiotics; compliant
Issues for Referral
  • Patients needing admission often require a pediatrician, urologist, or infectious disease consultant, esp. if there is VUR, renal anomaly, impaired renal function, recurrent infection, or hypertension.
  • Good follow-up is mandatory.
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS

Monitoring of urine for sterility, further evaluation for underlying pathology, and following growth pattern

Other books

When Darkness Falls by John Bodey
Stony River by Tricia Dower
The Ghost Pattern by Leslie Wolfe
The Zone of Interest by Martin Amis
The Cool School by Glenn O'Brien
Golden Threads by Kay Hooper