Labial adhesion and bacteriuria
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    Original Investigation
    P: 68-69
    June 2015

    Labial adhesion and bacteriuria

    J Turk Ger Gynecol Assoc 2015;16(2):68-69
    1. Department Of Pediatrics, Mashhad University Of Medical Sciences School Of Medicine, Mashhad, Iran
    No information available.
    No information available
    Received Date: 03.12.2014
    Accepted Date: 15.02.2015
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    ABSTRACT

    Objective:

    The purpose of this study is to evaluate the clinical presentation, laboratory findings, and response to treatment in girls with labial adhesion younger than 23 months.

    Material and Methods:

    A retrospective chart review of all girls younger than 23 months with the diagnosis of labial adhesion was referred to Dr Sheikh children’s clinic in Mashhad in northeast Iran between 1998 and 2013.

    Results:

    Sixty-three patients were diagnosed with labial adhesion during the review period. Most patients were diagnosed by physicians during the physical examination or during the evaluation for their voiding problems. The most prevalent symptom among patients was dysuria and restlessness while voiding. Twenty-one (33.3%) patients had a history of urinary tract infection. 17 (26.9%) patients had sterile pyuria and 69.8% showed presence of bacteria in their urine samples.

    Conclusion:

    Physicians may frequently encounter pre-pubertal girls whose urinalysis may show sterile pyuria or presence of bacteria with colony counts <105 in the absence of urinary tract infection symptoms. In these cases, labial adhesion should always be suspected and genital examination should be performed.

    Keywords: Labial adhesion, bacteriuria, urinary tract infection, topical estrogen

    References

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