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M. E. Jantunen, H. Saxén;, E. Salo, A. Siitonen, Recurrent Urinary Tract Infections in Infancy: Relapses or Reinfections?, The Journal of Infectious Diseases, Volume 185, Issue 3, 1 February 2002, Pages 375–379, https://doi.org/10.1086/338771
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Abstract
Seventeen infants with an index episode of pyelonephritis caused by Escherichia coli were monitored for 18 months for recurrent urinary tract infections (UTIs). All the infants had at least 1 recurrent UTI caused by the same pathogen. Twenty-six recurrent UTI episodes were recorded. The 40 E. coli strains available were analyzed by multiplex polymerase chain reaction for 3 alleles (classes I—III) of the papG gene and by pulsed-field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) after genomial digestion by XbaI. Of the 17 index strains, 12 (71%) carried the papG gene; 67% of these strains had class II alleles. In recurrent UTI isolates, the papG-positive E. coli appeared in 16 (70%) of 23 isolates. The proportion of all recurrent isolates available that represented a strain previously encountered (indistinguishable or highly similar in PFGE) in the same infant was 65%. Our results suggest that most recurrent UTIs in infants are endogenous relapses rather than reinfections caused by new organisms.