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Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department

OBJECTIVE: Midstream clean-catch urine is an accepted method to diagnose urinary tract infection but is impracticable in infants before potty training. We tested the bladder stimulation technique to obtain a clean-catch urine sample in infants. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We included 142 infants under wa...

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Autores principales: Tran, Antoine, Fortier, Clara, Giovannini-Chami, Lisa, Demonchy, Diane, Caci, Hervé, Desmontils, Jonathan, Montaudie-Dumas, Isabelle, Bensaïd, Ronny, Haas, Hervé, Berard, Etienne
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4816310/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27031953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152598
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author Tran, Antoine
Fortier, Clara
Giovannini-Chami, Lisa
Demonchy, Diane
Caci, Hervé
Desmontils, Jonathan
Montaudie-Dumas, Isabelle
Bensaïd, Ronny
Haas, Hervé
Berard, Etienne
author_facet Tran, Antoine
Fortier, Clara
Giovannini-Chami, Lisa
Demonchy, Diane
Caci, Hervé
Desmontils, Jonathan
Montaudie-Dumas, Isabelle
Bensaïd, Ronny
Haas, Hervé
Berard, Etienne
author_sort Tran, Antoine
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Midstream clean-catch urine is an accepted method to diagnose urinary tract infection but is impracticable in infants before potty training. We tested the bladder stimulation technique to obtain a clean-catch urine sample in infants. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We included 142 infants under walking age who required a urine sample in a cross- sectional study carried out during a 3-months period, from September to November 2014, in the emergency department of the University Children’s Hospital of Nice (France). A technique based on bladder stimulation and lumbar stimulation maneuvers, with at least two attempts, was tested by four trained physicians. The success rate and time to obtain urine sample within 3 minutes were evaluated. Discomfort (EVENDOL score ≥4/15) was measured. We estimated the risk factors in the failure of the technique. Chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test were used to compare frequencies. T-test and Wilcoxon test were used to compare quantitative data according to the normality of the distribution. Risk factors for failure of the technique were evaluated using a multivariate logistic regression model. RESULTS: We obtained midstream clean-catch urine in 55.6% of infants with a median time of 52.0 s (10.0; 110.0). The success rate decreased with age from 88.9% (newborn) to 28.6% (>1 y) (p = 0.0001) and with weight, from 85.7% (<4kg) to 28.6% (>10kg) (p = 0.0004). The success rate was 60.8% for infants without discomfort (p<0.0001). Heavy weight and discomfort were associated with failure, with adjusted ORs of 1.47 [1.04–2.31] and 6.65 [2.85–15.54], respectively. CONCLUSION: Bladder stimulation seems to be efficient in obtaining midstream urine with a moderate success rate in our study sample. This could be an alternative technique for infants before potty training but further randomized multicenter studies are needed to validate this procedure.
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spelling pubmed-48163102016-04-14 Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department Tran, Antoine Fortier, Clara Giovannini-Chami, Lisa Demonchy, Diane Caci, Hervé Desmontils, Jonathan Montaudie-Dumas, Isabelle Bensaïd, Ronny Haas, Hervé Berard, Etienne PLoS One Research Article OBJECTIVE: Midstream clean-catch urine is an accepted method to diagnose urinary tract infection but is impracticable in infants before potty training. We tested the bladder stimulation technique to obtain a clean-catch urine sample in infants. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We included 142 infants under walking age who required a urine sample in a cross- sectional study carried out during a 3-months period, from September to November 2014, in the emergency department of the University Children’s Hospital of Nice (France). A technique based on bladder stimulation and lumbar stimulation maneuvers, with at least two attempts, was tested by four trained physicians. The success rate and time to obtain urine sample within 3 minutes were evaluated. Discomfort (EVENDOL score ≥4/15) was measured. We estimated the risk factors in the failure of the technique. Chi-square test or Fisher’s exact test were used to compare frequencies. T-test and Wilcoxon test were used to compare quantitative data according to the normality of the distribution. Risk factors for failure of the technique were evaluated using a multivariate logistic regression model. RESULTS: We obtained midstream clean-catch urine in 55.6% of infants with a median time of 52.0 s (10.0; 110.0). The success rate decreased with age from 88.9% (newborn) to 28.6% (>1 y) (p = 0.0001) and with weight, from 85.7% (<4kg) to 28.6% (>10kg) (p = 0.0004). The success rate was 60.8% for infants without discomfort (p<0.0001). Heavy weight and discomfort were associated with failure, with adjusted ORs of 1.47 [1.04–2.31] and 6.65 [2.85–15.54], respectively. CONCLUSION: Bladder stimulation seems to be efficient in obtaining midstream urine with a moderate success rate in our study sample. This could be an alternative technique for infants before potty training but further randomized multicenter studies are needed to validate this procedure. Public Library of Science 2016-03-31 /pmc/articles/PMC4816310/ /pubmed/27031953 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152598 Text en © 2016 Tran et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tran, Antoine
Fortier, Clara
Giovannini-Chami, Lisa
Demonchy, Diane
Caci, Hervé
Desmontils, Jonathan
Montaudie-Dumas, Isabelle
Bensaïd, Ronny
Haas, Hervé
Berard, Etienne
Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department
title Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department
title_full Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department
title_fullStr Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department
title_short Evaluation of the Bladder Stimulation Technique to Collect Midstream Urine in Infants in a Pediatric Emergency Department
title_sort evaluation of the bladder stimulation technique to collect midstream urine in infants in a pediatric emergency department
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4816310/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27031953
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0152598
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