Clinical characteristics of vesicoureteral reflux in children at a university hospital in medellín, colombia. 1960-2004.
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17533/udea.iatreia.4274Keywords:
Hydronephrosis, Urinary tract infection, Vesicoureteral refluxAbstract
A total of 4.129 children with the diagnosis of urinary tract infection (UTI) were attended at Hospital Universitario San Vicente de Paúl in Medellín, Colombia, between 1960 and 2004.
Vesicoureteral reflux (VUR), the commonest anomaly associated to UTI, was found in 1.309 children (31.7%) who presented 1.914 cases of affected renal units (605 patients had bilateral reflux).
This is a descriptive, retrospective work, carried out with information registered at the pediatric nephrology service by one of the authors (VPE) on children younger than 17 years, with the diagnosis of VUR.
The most important registered characteristics were reviewed, and the findings were as follows: 61.1% of children were women, 29.2% had the diagnosis of VUR made during the first year of life, and 41.4% had other associated anomalies; 72.4% of children had VUR of either III or IV grades, 53.8% had unilateral reflux, 23.8% had spontaneous resolution, and 36.1% required surgical correction. In 582 (44.5% out of 1.309) of these patients, studies for renal scarring were carried out, and it was found in 371 (63.7%); 2.3% had high blood pressure, 7.4% developed chronic renal failure; 0.9% received kidney transplantation, and 2.4% died.
Our findings, similar to those reported by other authors, allow us to insist on the need for adequate management of children with VUR, because of the risk of developing high blood pressure and chronic renal failure.
Better diagnostic systems for VUR and renal scarring, the progress of information diffusion, and the medical interest on this subject are opportunities for making earlier diagnoses, and opportune and proper treatment of these children.
Downloads
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Papers published in the journal are available for use under the Creative Commons license, specifically Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International.
The papers must be unpublished and sent exclusively to the Journal Iatreia; the author uploading the contribution is required to submit two fully completed formats: article submission and authorship responsibility.