Abstract
A study of possible new cases of urinary tract infection in a population of some two thousand children under the age of twelve years is described. Over a two year period one hundred and four children were seen in the study and seventeen were found to have a significant bacterial infection. Presenting symptoms, urinalysis results, investigation and methods of follow-up are examined. The results suggest that the incidence of detectable urinary system abnormality in children presenting for the first time with a proven urinary infection is less than in a comparable hospital population. In this study, of the seventeen children with proven infection, only four have so far been shown to have a detectable structural or functional abnormality.
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CITATION STYLE
Grundy-Wheeler, N. J. (1987). The diagnosis and management of urinary tract infection in children: a two year study in army general practice. Journal of the Royal Army Medical Corps, 133(3), 148–151. https://doi.org/10.1136/jramc-133-03-06
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