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Are urine dipstick tests reliable in predicting intraoperative urinary tract infection?

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L.M.I. Jannello   +11 more
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Regional Variance in the Use of Urine Dipstick Test for Outpatients in Japan.

Nephrology, 2020
AIM The urine dipstick is a simple diagnostic module for detecting proteinuria, hematuria, and glucosuria and is favorably accepted in several Eastern Asian countries despite debates regarding its accuracy and target population, claiming that ...
H. Nishi   +4 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Enhanced Antibiotic Treatment Based on Positive Urine Dipstick Infection Test Before Percutaneous Nephrolithotomy Did Not Prevent Postoperative Infection in Patients with Negative Urine Culture

Journal of endourology, 2021
Introduction: Urinary tract infection (UTI) should be treated before percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL). However, the most appropriate treatment strategy in patients with negative urine culture but positive urine dipstick infection test (positive ...
Peng Xu   +10 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Nitrite-negative results in urinary tract infection by Enterobacterales: does the nitrite dipstick test have low sensitivity?

Journal of Medical Microbiology, 2023
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is one of the most common bacterial infections among humans. Urine culture is the gold standard diagnostic method for UTI; however, the dipstick test for nitrite is a widely used method signalling the presence of urinary ...
Carlos Eduardo Lopes Araújo-Filho   +8 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Neutrophil extracellular traps protect the kidney from ascending infection and are required for a positive leukocyte dipstick test

Science Translational Medicine
Lower urinary tract infection (UTI) is common but only rarely complicated by pyelonephritis. However, the mechanisms preventing extension to the kidney are unclear.
Andrew P. Stewart   +12 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Febrile young infants with abnormal urine dipstick at low risk of invasive bacterial infection

Archives of Disease in Childhood, 2020
Objectives To develop and validate a prediction rule to identify well-appearing febrile infants aged ≤90 days with an abnormal urine dipstick at low risk of invasive bacterial infections (IBIs, bacteraemia or bacterial meningitis).
R. Velasco   +22 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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