Urinary Tract Infections in Children (UTIs)

Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist
Atrium Health Wake Forest Baptist
119.4 هزار بار بازدید - 10 سال پیش - Dr. Steve Hodges, Associate Professor
Dr. Steve Hodges, Associate Professor of Pediatric Urology, discusses Urinary Tract Infections in children.

Pediatric Urology at Wake Forest Baptist: http://www.wakehealth.edu/Urology/Ped...

TRANSCRIPT: Hi, I'm Steve Hodges, Associate Professor of Pediatric Urology at Wake Forest University School of Medicine. I want to talk to you about urinary tract infections in children- primarily little girls, because that's who gets most of them.
Many of you may not be familiar with the urinary tract. Blood goes through your kidneys- you have two of them which produce urine- which flows down to the tubes called the ureters into your bladder, where you store the urine and then evacuate it when you need to.
Every urinary tract infection in a little girl happens when bacteria from the colon comes out of the colon, travels up into the urethra and bladder and sets up shop. And that's what causes urinary tract infections.
They can present with varying symptoms- typically urgency and peeing very quickly- dysuria or pain while urinating. Sometimes it can even progress to urinary frequency and sometime fever, chills, nausea, vomiting. And those there are actual kidney infections- which we won't talk about right now- we're going to focus primarily on the bladder infections.
I want to talk about how urinary tract infections happen and some of the myths about them. So we discussed that every infection happens when bacteria travel into the bladder from the colon.
So there's only three risk factors that girls can have that cause infections: the primary one is constipation, if you don't let all of the stool out of the colon, that can lead to infections; second, is vulvitis or inflammation of the skin between the rectum and the urethra, that allows bacteria that cause infections to live on the skin more easily and make its way into the bladder; and the third is incomplete or irregular emptying of the bladder, kids hold their urine too long and that is a definite way to lead to infection.
A good reminder about that is that I very rarely see urinary tract infections in children prior to toilet training. That's because they have less instance of constipation, their moms usually take really good care of their bottoms, and they never hold their urine because they don't have a reason to.
Some common myths for infection include the way you wipe. In fact it's never been proven that wiping front-to-back or back-to-front has any effect on the incidence of infections. Also, a lot of physicians will tell kids not to take baths and to take showers instead and that really has no bearing on infections- depending on what kind of bath you take. If you're in irritating soaps or bubble baths sometimes it can cause inflammation which, as we mentioned, vulvitis, is a factor in infections.
But sitting in tubs can be beneficial sometimes especially if you use non-irritating soaps.
And sometimes if you have irritation on your bottom, just using baking soda or oatmeal or a cup of apple cider vinegar can actually soothe the irritation.
People often use cranberry juice to help treat infections. Cranberry juice- there's rare data that may help prevent infections, but it's not very strong and it definitely cannot treat infections.
So the main thing for little girls to do to help prevent infections is number one, treat the constipation; number two, make sure the bottom is clean and dry; and number three is urinate on time. If you do those three things, it's impossible to get an infection.
If you think your daughter has an infection because she's peeing frequently, peeing very urgently, or having new onset incontinence, or pain with urinating, then you should take her to the physician where they will check a urine study- it's called a urinalysis.
The child voids into a cup and they look at it under a microscope and there are certain findings on that analysis that will tell them there's an infection.
If the infection has no fever- just those bladder symptoms we discussed- then it's very simple to treat: you just take some antibiotics and it gets better.
If the child has fever and nausea/vomiting and flank pain, then that could mean a kidney infection which is much more severe and you may need some imaging studies such as a renal ultrasound or a voiding cystourethrogram to evaluate the child's anatomy to see why they are at risk for these worse infections.
It's important though, if you have these new bladder symptoms, to see your pediatrician to get this evaluated quickly.
10 سال پیش در تاریخ 1393/06/31 منتشر شده است.
119,477 بـار بازدید شده
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