Abstract
Obtaining uncontaminated urine samples are important to diagnosis urinary tract infection in neonates. The present study was designed to compare urine contamination rates in two common methods of urine collection: urine bag versus suprapubic aspiration. In a cross-sectional study, 119 consecutive infants (aged 3 to 28 days) with fever who were referred to Children’s Hospital Medical Center in Tehran between September 2004 and March 2005 were included. Urine was collected simultaneously by bag and suprapubic aspiration. The urine samples were analyzed and bacterial cultures performed using standard bacteriologic techniques. The rate of culture contamination differed markedly according to the method of urine culture. Suprapubic aspiration specimens were sterile in 92.4%. Pathogenic bacteria were isolated in 7.6%. No bacterial isolates were deemed to be contaminants. Only 8.5% of bag specimens were sterile. Of non-sterile cultures, 36.9% of bacterial isolates were deemed to be pathogenic and 54.6% contaminants (P
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