Introduction: urinary tract infection (UTI) in children is a common process. It is essential to find an adequate method to collect urine, to avoid false positives, minimizing invasive procedures. Clean catch urine (CCU) is a noninvasive technique, with low contamination rate, so it has been established as the recommended method for urine collection to update our clinical protocol. Material and methods: a prospective longitudinal descriptive and analytical study was conducted in a tertiary hospital in the Emergencies’ room (ER) in two periods, before and after the update protocol. Age, sex, time in the ER, collection method, sediment and urine culture and diagnosis in febrile patients <3 years were analyzed. Results: there were 140 patients in 2012 and 180 in 2011, with no differences in age and sex distribu-tion. The mean ages were 12 and 14 months respectively. 35.7% of the samples were collected by CCU in 2012, compared to 7.8% in 2011 (p<0.001). In 2011 more confirmations of urine analysis were necessary: 20.5% vs. 10.7% in 2012. There were no significant differences between the number of suspected UTI or the contaminated samples in both years. Neither did between samples collected by catheterization or CCU in 2012. The average length of stay in the ER in 2011 was 221 minutes, while 190 in 2012 (p<0.05). Conclusions: urine collection by CCU is a simple and noninvasive method, which usually does not re-quire confirmation, thereby reducing the wait time in the ER. There has not been an objectified in-creased of false diagnosis of UTI in patients with sample collected by CCU.
CITATION STYLE
Roncalés Samanes, M. P., Caudevilla Lafuente, P., Sancho Gracia, E., Gómez Barrena, V., Pérez Delgado, R., & Campos Calleja, C. (2015). Recogida de orina en el lactante febril para el diagnóstico de la infección urinaria en Urgencias. Pediatría Atención Primaria, 17(67), 205–211. https://doi.org/10.4321/s1139-76322015000400002
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