Original article
Prevalence of urinary tract infection in febrile infants*

https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-3476(05)81531-8Get rights and content

Urinary tract infection (UTI), a relatively common cause of fever in infancy, usually consists of pyelonephritis and may cause permanent renal damage. This study assessed (1) the prevalence of UTI in febrile infants (temperature≥38.3°C) with differing demographic and clinical characteristics and (2) the usefulness of urinalysis in diagnosing UTI. We diagnosed UTI in 50 (5.3%) of 945 febrile infants if we found ≥10,000 colony-forming units of a single pathogen per milliliter in a urine specimen obtained by catheterization. Prevalences were similar in (1) infants aged ≤2 months undergoing examination for sepsis (4.6%), (2) infants aged >2 months in whom UTI was suspected, usually because no source of fever was apparent (5.9%), and (3) infants with no suspected UTI, most of whom had other illnesses (5.1%). Female and white infants had significantly more UTIs, respectively, than male and black infants. In all, 17% of white female infants with temperature ≥39°C had UTI, significantly more (p<0.05) than any other grouping of infants by sex, race, and temperature. Febrile infants with no apparent source of fever were twice as likely to have UTI (7.5%) as those with a possible source of fever such as otitis media (3.5%) (p=0.02). Only 1 (1.6%) of 62 subjects with an unequivocal source of fever, such as meningitis, had UTI. As indicators of UTI, pyuria and bacteriuria had sensitivities of 54% and 86% and specificities of 96% and 63%, respectively. In infants with fever, clinicians should consider UTI a potential source and consider a urine culture as part of the diagnostic evaluation.

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      Citation Excerpt :

      Urinary tract infection (UTI) is the most common bacterial infection that occurs in infancy and childhood [1-3], with up to 30% of the children developing recurrent episodes of UTI within 6 to 12 months after their initial encounter [4].

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    *

    Supported in part by BRS grant SO7RR05507-28 from the Biomedical Research Support Grant Program, Division of Research Resources, and General Clinical Research Center grant 5M01RR00084, both from the National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Md.

    a

    Now in the Department of Pediatrics, University of Michigan Medical Center and Mott Children's Hospital, Ann Arbor.

    b

    Now in the Department of Pediatrics, University of Massachusetts Medical Center, Worcester.

    c

    Now in the Department of Pediatrics, Ohio State University School of Medicine and Columbus Children's Hospital, Columbus.

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