2011
DOI: 10.1136/adc.2011.215277
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Question 1 How common is co-existing meningitis in infants with urinary tract infection?

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Cited by 17 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Up to 2% of infants less than 3 months with UTI have coexisting meningitis . 18 The febrile infant under the age of 3 months can be difficult to assess, as pain and pyrexia can cause irritability, clouding the clinical picture. In these infants there is evidence suggesting LP should be performed to look for coexisting meningitis.…”
Section: Clinical Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Up to 2% of infants less than 3 months with UTI have coexisting meningitis . 18 The febrile infant under the age of 3 months can be difficult to assess, as pain and pyrexia can cause irritability, clouding the clinical picture. In these infants there is evidence suggesting LP should be performed to look for coexisting meningitis.…”
Section: Clinical Questionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The second potential site of colonization is the urinary tract, which may harbor asymptomatic bacteriuria 129 , 130 . Ascending infection can lead to seeding of the kidney, bacteremia, and then meningitis, as around 13.2% of febrile young infants will present with a urinary tract infection, and a smaller subset will have simultaneous evidence of bacteriuria, bacteremia, and meningitis 44 , 131 .…”
Section: Special Considerations Of Young Infant Meningitismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Existe evidencia que avala el abordaje ambulatorio de los niños mayores de 2 meses con ITU, en buen estado general y con seguimiento asegurado, sin realizar hemocultivos ni PL. [18][19][20][21] Con respecto al riesgo de neumonía, se recomienda solicitar radiografía de tórax con recuento de leucocitos mayores de 20 000/mm 3 , dado el riesgo de neumonía oculta (nivel de evidencia ii). 22 La identificación de infección viral disminuye, pero no descarta la posibilidad de IBG.…”
Section: S30 / Arch Argent Pediatr 2017;115 Supl 2:s27-s37 / Subcomisunclassified