The order in which children with urinary tract infection should undergo voiding cystourethrography (VCUG), excretory urography (EU), and/or renal ultrasonography (US) is not standardized. To determine a logical sequence of study, we performed VCUG and then either US or EU on 389 consecutive children with urinary tract infections. Thirty-seven percent (133/358) of the children were found to have reflux; of these, 22.5% (30/133) had an abnormal excretory urogram. No correlation was found between either the age of the child and the degree of reflux or the age of the child and the percentage of children with abnormal excretory urograms. Since normal EU or US results do not exclude significant reflux, VCUG is recommended as the preferred initial screening examination in children with urinary tract infection.
Regional distribution of pulmonary function was evaluated preoperatively and postoperatively with xenon-133 perfusion and ventilation scintigraphy in 17 patients with pectus excavatum. Ventilatory preoperative studies were abnormal in 12 of 17 patients, resolving in seven of 12 postoperatively. Perfusion scans were abnormal in ten of 17 patients preoperatively; six of ten showed improvement postoperatively. Ventilation-perfusion ratios were abnormal in ten of 17 patients, normalizing postoperatively in six of ten. Symmetry of ventilation-perfusion ratio images improved in six out of nine in the latter group. The distribution of regional lung function in pectus excavatum can be evaluated preoperatively to support indications for surgery. Postoperative improvement can be documented by physiological changes produced by the surgical correction.
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