Affiliation:
1. Professor and HOD, Department of Paediatrics, Vilasrao Deshmukh Government Medical College, Latur, Maharashtra, India
2. Junior Resident, Department of Paediatrics, Vilasrao Deshmukh Government Medical College, Latur, Maharashtra, India
Abstract
Abstract
Purpose:
Fever serves as the most frequent cause of visits to emergency/outpatient pediatric departments among children under the age of five. Very frequently, the youngster is given antibiotics on an arbitrary basis without receiving the proper examination for a urinary tract infection (UTI). This study’s goals were to assess the prevalence of UTIs in febrile children between 6 months and 5 years of age. To study the proportion of UTIs in children between 6 months and 5 years presenting with fever. To study the association of various risk factors with UTI.
Methodology:
This Cross-sectional Descriptive observational research was done in the Pediatric department of tertiary care hospital from August 2020 to December 2022, in febrile kids between 6 months and 5 years age group using different variables. Association between two qualitative variables was seen by using Chi-square/Fischer’s exact test. A P < 0.05 was considered statistically significant whereas a P < 0.001 was considered highly significant.
Results:
Among the total study population, it was found that 5.58% of the patients with fever without focus had a UTI, while the majority of patients, 94.42% did not have a UTI but had fever without a specific focus. In UTI cases, urine culture growth patterns showed the presence of different isolates, including Escherichia coli (30.43%), Klebsiella (56.52%), Pseudomonas aeruginosa (8.7%), and Candida (4.34%).
Conclusion:
In the present research, the overall occurrence of UTI in children <5 years with fever without focus was 5.58%. Patients with significant pyuria and positive urine culture (UTI) were 43.75% and with significant pyuria but the sterile culture was 56.25%. So, it is concluded that significant pyuria can be sterile pyuria and cannot be labeled as UTI without confirmation on the urine culture report.