Abstract
Recent studies have demonstrated that both congenital hypoplasia and acquired scarring are involved in the parenchymal lesions associated with reflux nephropathy. Medical therapy can prevent symptomatic infection. While there is no proof that either medical or antireflux surgery prevents acquired scarring, paradoxically there is evidence that surgery adds no benefit to medical therapy, and that the results of medical therapy and surgical therapy are similar in children with isolated severe reflux. The group at most severe risk of renal scarring is infants and the effects of medical and surgical therapy in preventing acquired renal injury in this group have not been sufficiently investigated. On the basis of this information it has been our practice to maintain urine sterility using continuous antibiotic prophylaxis throughout infancy and early childhood. Following the development of reliable urine toilet habit and the ability to collect midstream urine specimens, antibiotics are given according to the frequency of urine infection, and weekly testing of morning urine with nitrite strips at home is used for early detection of infection and prevention of symptomatic infection. Antireflux surgery is mandatory for those children with complicated VUR (such as urinary tract obstruction) and should otherwise be reserved for those having persistent breakthrough infections in infancy and early childhood.
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