Fever, On Paracetamol, Urine Infection, Found White Cells. UTI?
Thanks for writing to us.
If the fever is getting worse and UTI is suspected with white cells present in the urine, then empirical treatment with antibiotics can be started but you need to consult the pediatrician to choose the best antibiotic for your child and then to prescribe it as none of the systemic antibiotics are available without a prescription.
Another thing is that if it actually is a viral fever which his pediatrician is suspecting after examining him, then antibiotics are not going to help him.
If the fever remains constant or subsides then you can wait for the lab results as it is always best to start an antibiotic based on lab results for best response specially in recurrent cases.
I hope this information has been both informative and helpful for you. If there are additional concerns, I am available for your followups.
Regards.
My baby's fever has subsided on its own now (we measured 38.3, 32 hours ago and gave him paracetamol. After that he was without fever for 11 hours, when we measured 37.7. However we didn't give anything that time. The fever dissapeared on its own in a couple of hours, so he has been fever free for over 12 hours now. Based on this pattern, do you think is it more likely to have been a viral infection, or could it still be an UTI? I am just asking because due to the method we used to collect the urine sample we have been told it is very likely it was contaminated so we will not know for certain, and if that's the case I was wondering whether it is recommended to ask the doctor to repeat the test just in case..
Thanks for writing back.
If the fever has subsided on its own then most likely it was a viral fever. An infection in urine never subsides without antibiotics. Still you can repeat the urine examination after collecting the sample under aseptic conditions. The lab personal should help you.
Sincerely hope it will help. Wishing you an early recovery.
The disappearance of fever without any treatment indicates that the infection in the kidneys of your child is subclinical- the one which does not produce any symptoms.
Number of organisms never tell anything about the contamination of specimen. It is the association of organisms with wbc's which indicates that actually an infection is there.
Two episodes of UTI occurring at such a short interval usually indicates a recurrence and unlikely to be a fresh infection however it is difficult to commit this for sure.
Repeated UTI's in a child need many conditions to be ruled out like posterior urethral valve, diabetes, defect in urinary tract causing stasis, nephritis, lowered immunity due to any reason, etc. Your pediatrician will guide you how to go about in ruling out all these conditions.
Hope this will help you.