Urinary tract infections in children. Part I-- Young girls with non-refluxing ureters.

  • 1 November 1974
    • journal article
    • Vol. 121 (5), 366-73
Abstract
This paper is the study of 144 girls with histories of urinary tract infection followed at the Stanford Medical Center who were found to be free of ureterovesical reflux. The mean age at onset of infection for the entire group was about four years and ranged from the first few months of life to age 10. Ninety-two percent of the 505 infection episodes in these children presented with symptoms referable to the lower tract, and bacterial localization studies confirmed that 85 percent of the infections were limited to the bladder. Escherichia coli was the most common organism isolated and most infections were caused by a pure culture of a single bacteria. In only two of the 144 patients studied was there any evidence of upper tract damage related to infection. The possibility that these patients had reflux at an earlier age could not be discounted. In response to short-term antibacterial therapy in 66 of the patients followed closely for an average of 40 months each, 20 percent of the patients had no further infections and 80 percent went on to recurrence. With each succeeding treatment an additional 20 percent of the patients were "cured," but the remainder experienced recurrent infections during the follow-up. This reinfection pattern supports the use of long-term antibacterial prophylaxis in all girls who have more than three or four recurrences of infections. Urethral dilation appeared to have no value in reducing the reinfection rate. While it appears that in the absence of ureterovesical reflux few, if any, of these children will go on to develop upper tract damage, long-term prophylactic suppressive medication can clearly be justified on the grounds of reducing patient morbidity.