DISEASES

When children suffer from urinary tract infections

Author: John
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Time: 2012/4/18 17:02:20

Bacteria love warm, wet places, so the urinary tract is a great place for them to invade. When that happens, a child may complain of burning during urination, have an urgent need to urinate and have trouble "holding it." The child may have a fever, foul-smelling urine, abdominal pain and accidental bed-wetting.

A urinary tract infection likely is to blame.

The urinary tract consists of the kidneys (where urine is made), the ureters (the long tubes that lead from the kidneys to the bladder), the bladder (where urine is stored), and the urethra (the tube that urine comes out of). An infection can occur anywhere along the urinary tract.

Urethritis is an infection of the urethra, cystitis is an infection of the bladder, and pyelonephritis is an infection of the kidneys. A kidney infection is often more serious and makes a child sicker than infections in other parts of the urinary tract.

A UTI occurs when the bacteria that naturally lives on the skin travels up the urethra and into the bladder. Girls get UTIs more often than boys because their urethra is much shorter. Uncircumcised boys get UTIs more often than those who have been circumcised because bacteria can live under the foreskin of the penis.

A UTI is diagnosed by testing a sample of the child's urine. It's very important that the sample truly reflects the germs in the bladder or urethra and not the germs that are living harmlessly on the child's skin. Collecting a urine specimen in older children can be done by "clean catch" where the skin around the urethra is thoroughly cleaned and the child urinates into a sterile cup. In babies and young children, the urine is collected by placing a small tube through the urethra and into the bladder (catheterization) or using a needle to prick the bladder through the skin just above the child's pubic bone (suprapubic collection).

In most cases, a UTI is not serious and goes away quickly with antibiotics, which should be taken as directed to make sure the infection is completely eliminated. An untreated UTI can spread and cause damage to the kidneys.

Some children are prone to repeat UTIs, which are uncomfortable, but usually harmless if treated. Occasionally, multiple UTIs may signal a problem in the urinary tract.

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