1.Bacterial pathogens and antibiotic resistance patterns in children with urinary tract infection in a Malaysian tertiary hospital
Noor Shafina Mohd Nor ; Nor Azizah Abu ; Mohammad Abdur Rashid ; Faisal Mohd Fadzli ; Mohamad Ikhsan Selamat ; Hafizah Zainuddin ; Anis Siham Zainal Abidin ; Wan Jazilah Wan Ismail ; Raja Khuzaiah Raja Abdul Razak
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2015;70(3):153-157
SUMMARY
Introduction: Urinary tract infection (UTI) is a common
bacterial infection affecting children and therefore, prompt
recognition and accurate antimicrobial management are
vital to prevent kidney damage. This study aims to
determine the bacterial pathogens and their patterns of
antimicrobial resistance in children presenting with UTI.
Methods: A retrospective study of 721 cases, involving
children between the ages of 1-day old to 13 years old with
culture-proven UTI in Selayang Hospital, Malaysia between
January 2007 and December 2011. The bacterial pathogens
and antibiotic resistance patterns in the total population,
prophylaxis and no prophylaxis groups were studied.
Results: The 3 most common organisms isolated in the total
population were E.Coli (41.6%), Klebsiella spp. (21.2%) and
Enterococcus spp. (11.0%). With regards to the antibiotic
resistance, E.Coli resistance rates to ampicillin, cefuroxime
and gentamicin were 67.7%, 15.3% and 7.3% respectively.
Ampicillin-resistance was also highest in Klebsiella spp.
(84.3%), Enterococcus spp. (15.5%) and Proteus spp.
(55.5%).
Conclusion: E.coli remains to be the leading bacterial
pathogen causing UTI in children, with ampicillin-resistance
occurring in more than half of these cases. Therefore,
accurate choice of antibiotics is important to ensure optimal
outcome. In our study, cefuroxime and gentamicin have
lower antibiotic resistance rates and can be used in the
treatment of UTI in children.
Urinary Tract Infections
2.Parental Knowledge on Nephrotic Syndrome and Disease Relapse in children
Shiau Chuen Diong ; Syed Zulkifli Syed Zakaria ; Rahmah Rasat ; Wan Jazilah Wan Ismail
The Medical Journal of Malaysia 2019;74(4):288-295
Introduction: Parental knowledge on nephrotic syndrome
and disease relapse is important for early recognition and
treatment of relapse to prevent the complications. Parental
knowledge on nephrotic syndrome was reported to be
inadequate from published studies. To date, there is no
study on parental knowledge on childhood nephrotic
syndrome in Malaysia. This study is thus aimed at to
determine the level of knowledge on NS and disease relapse
among parents of children with nephrotic syndrome and
determine factors that influence knowledge on nephrotic
syndrome and disease relapse. Study Design and
Methods: This was a cross-sectional study conducted in
Paediatric Nephrology Clinic, Hospital Selayang from
November 2016 to November 2017. Seventy-eight parents
were recruited based on universal sampling. Selfadministered questionnaire in Bahasa Malaysia and English
was designed through focus group discussion with five
subject matter experts and validated through content
validity. Data was analysed using IBM SPSS Statistics 23.0.
Results: Majority of parents or guardians (91%) were able to
answer more than 50% of the questions correctly. Of these,
56% were able to answer more than 75% of the questions
correctly. A 'cut-off' of 75% was defined as good knowledge.
Parents of children with frequent relapses had higher
parental knowledge and this was statistically significant
(p=0.025).
Conclusion: Parental knowledge on nephrotic syndrome
and disease relapse was still inadequate as only 56%
parents had good knowledge. The main areas of deficit in
parental knowledge were related to medications, infections,
home urine dipstick monitoring, and recognition of warning
signs during relapse.