We suggest that vesicoureteral reflux is more common in children even without urinary-tract infection than has been thought previously. The guidelines recommending a search for reflux by means of voiding cystourethrography should be reconsidered.
The hypothalamo-pituitary-insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) axis was studied in 24 prepubertal children with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) and 12 non-diabetic children. There were no significant differences between the diabetic and control subjects in basal concentrations of immunoreactive growth hormone releasing hormone (ir-GHRH), growth hormone (GH) or stimulated GH levels, but after exercise ir-GHRH concentrations were higher in the diabetic children. Peripheral IGF-I levels were significantly lower in the diabetic children, and even lower in those with poor metabolic control. A positive correlation was found between IGF-I levels and circulating free insulin concentrations in the diabetic subjects (r = 0.49, p < 0.05). These observations suggest that the GH response to physiological stimulation is normal in prepubertal diabetic children. Exercise-induced GH response may not be mediated by GHRH. IGF-I levels were reduced in prepubertal children with IDDM and even more so in subjects with poor metabolic control. This may be a consequence of transitory hypoinsulineamia, emphasizing the importance of adequate insulinization to facilitate optimal growth in children and adolescents with IDDM.
The clinical picture of nephropathia epidemica (NE) among children is poorly understood. We made a retrospective analysis of 32 patients aged 4-15 years treated in hospital for serologically verified recent NE. The most common clinical findings were high fever (100%), nausea (81%), vomiting (72%), tenderness in the kidney area (63%), abdominal pains (59%) and headache (59%). A peculiar symptom of NE, transient visual abnormalities, was found in 25% of patients. Four children had clinical bleeding and 1 had encephalitis. 44% were transiently hypertensive. Renal function was impaired in 84%, proteinuria was present in 97%, hematuria in 73% and leukocyturia in 44%. Other common laboratory findings were thrombocytopenia (87%), leukocytosis (41%), elevated ERS (74%, up to 76 mm/h) and CRP level (89%, up to 97 mg/l), elevated liver enzymes (53%) and hypoalbuminemia (50%). No child needed dialysis therapy and all recovered. NE seems to be less severe in children than in adults.
The role of the nappy and nursing habits as possible risk factors of urinary tract infection (UTI) were analysed in a prospective case-control study. Cases entered hospital due to their first UTI attack. Children hospitalized for some other reason, mainly upper respiratory infections or elective surgery, served as controls matched for age and sex. Cases and their controls (208 girls and 184 boys) used nappies day and night. The odds ratios for risk of contracting UTI according to different nappy types used prior to the first UTI diagnosis were 0.95 for all-in-one (superabsorbent) nappies (95% CI 0.62-1.46), 1.04 (0.69-1.57) for standard disposable nappies and 1.00 (0.46-2.16) for washable cotton nappies. The type and number of nappies used daily as well as the number of defecations per day were similar in UTI patients and the controls. There were no significant differences in the frequency of buttock washes nor in the daily time spent without nappy. The use of cotton nappies practically finished during the study. The type of nappy used or other nursing habits with the baby appeared to be insignificant risk factors for UTI during nappy age. The use of modern nappies has become so thoroughly commonplace that the true impact of nappy type on any condition during infancy is difficult or even impossible to evaluate in a case-control setting.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.