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Occurrence of renal scars in children after their first referral for urinary tract infection

104

Citations

4

References

1997

Year

Abstract

Urinary tract infections in childhood may cause renal scars, which can lead to hypertension and renal failure: diagnostic imaging is therefore important to detect children with scarring so that they can be monitored. A multidisciplinary group that produced imaging guidelines1 broadly agreed that younger children should have a dimercaptosuccinic acid (DMSA) scan to detect scarring and an ultrasonography to identify structural lesions after one infection, but most thought that children over 7 years should be investigated only after recurrent infections, using ultrasound only, perhaps because of their low risk of new scar formation.2 Others have suggested imaging only children who have a fever.3 In Newcastle we have performed ultrasound and dimercaptosuccinic acid scans (after two months free of infection) on every child when first referred after a urinary tract infection. Here we describe …

References

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