The urinary tract infections are common in children. It is estimated that about 3% of girls and 1% of boys suffer from a urinary tract infection before the age of 11 years. A prompt diagnosis and treatment are necessary for the prevention of morbidity and long-term sequelae. Currently, there are different methods of urine collection, such as suprapubic aspiration, the survey, the collection bag and the jet medium collection. They have in common to be time-consuming, invasive in some cases, providers of contaminated levies for others and impossible in children incontinent for the last. A Spanish study developed a new collection technique, for kidney and bladder stimulation, noninvasive, in the new-born to 30-day months. The results are promising with a success rate of over 85% within a period of about 45s. No study has looked at a broader pediatric population, including children from birth to age of acquisition of walking. We hypothesize that it is possible to obtain urine in less than 3 minutes, noninvasively, in infants who have not acquired the works for which a urine sample is required.
The urinary tract infections are common in children. It is estimated that about 3% of girls and 1% of boys suffer from a urinary tract infection before the age of 11 years. A prompt diagnosis and treatment are necessary for the prevention of morbidity and long-term sequelae. Currently, there are different methods of urine collection, such as suprapubic aspiration, the survey, the collection bag and the jet medium collection. They have in common to be time-consuming, invasive in some cases, providers of contaminated levies for others and impossible in children incontinent for the last. A Spanish study developed a new collection technique, for kidney and bladder stimulation, noninvasive, in the new-born to 30-day months. The results are promising with a success rate of over 85% within a period of about 45s. No study has looked at a broader pediatric population, including children from birth to age of acquisition of walking. We hypothesize that it is possible to obtain urine in less than 3 minutes, noninvasively, in infants who have not acquired the works for which a urine sample is required. The main objective is the Evaluation of bladder stimulation as a noninvasive technique of urine collection in infants who have not acquired walking
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
OTHER
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
43
Bladder stimulation as a noninvasive technique of urine collection. The renal and bladder stimulation will be performed in less than 3 minutes, with a maximum of two attempts spaced about 20 minutes
Fondation Lenval
Nice, France
Evaluation of bladder stimulation as a noninvasive technique of urine collection in infants who have not acquired walking
• Obtaining urine or not (YES / NO) by bladder stimulation in less than 3 minutes (max 2 attempts). This is evaluated by an investigator who directs the bladder stimulation technique.
Time frame: During baseline at time 0
evaluation period of urine collection
If successful, the evaluation period, in seconds, of urine collection using a chronometer (between the start of bladder stimulation and obtaining the urine)
Time frame: During baseline at time 0
Evaluation of the tolerance of the infant
Evaluation of the tolerance of the infant undergoing stimulation technique using wide EVENDOL scale pain, noted on 15
Time frame: During baseline at time 0
alternative of the urine sample
In case of failure, the investigator who included infants in the study will specify the alternative of the urine sample from: collection bag, survey, suprapubic aspiration, and the success or failure of this alternative
Time frame: During baseline after 2 attemps of bladder stimulation
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