Urinary tract infection in children. A reappraisal of its radiologic investigation.
Λέξεις-κλειδιά
Αφηρημένη
In a prospective study, 100 children with either an acute or a previous history of urinary tract infection were investigated by intravenous urography, micturition cystourethrography, and ultrasonography. The results from the three diagnostic modalities were compared: The urinary tracts in 59 patients were normal, and revealed some abnormality in 41. Ultrasonography proved to be superior to intravenous urography in outlining renal contours and in detecting subtle cortical changes secondary to urinary tract infection (such as slight increases in cortical thickness and edema or cortical scarring). The mucosa of the renal pelvis and bladder was more easily assessed by ultrasound than by intravenous urography. Both modalities were "equally" accurate in detecting important congenital malformations of the urinary tract. Ultrasound failed to detect 24 of 28 ureters demonstrating reflux on voiding cystourethrography. We propose that carefully performed abdominal ultrasonography can replace intravenous urography in the initial investigation of urinary tract infection in children. It should be done in association with a radiographic or radionuclide voiding cystogram. Intravenous urography would then become a complementary examination for abnormal or problematic patients.