2019
Parenteral Antibiotic Therapy Duration in Young Infants With Bacteremic Urinary Tract Infections
Desai S, Aronson PL, Shabanova V, Neuman MI, Balamuth F, Pruitt CM, DePorre AG, Nigrovic LE, Rooholamini SN, Wang ME, Marble RD, Williams DJ, Sartori L, Leazer RC, Mitchell C, Shah SS. Parenteral Antibiotic Therapy Duration in Young Infants With Bacteremic Urinary Tract Infections. Pediatrics 2019, 144: e20183844. PMID: 31431480, PMCID: PMC6855812, DOI: 10.1542/peds.2018-3844.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsBacteremic urinary tract infectionUrinary tract infectionAntibiotic durationParenteral antibioticsTract infectionsFrequent recurrent urinary tract infectionsYoung infantsMulticenter retrospective cohort studyRecurrent urinary tract infectionsAntibiotic therapy durationShort-course groupRetrospective cohort studyLong-course therapyMarginal structural modelsHospital reutilizationUTI recurrenceOral antibioticsCohort studyParenteral therapyPatient characteristicsTherapy durationUrine cultureChildren's HospitalWeighted populationEarly conversion
2011
Remember the Saphenous
Riera A, Langhan M, Northrup V, Santucci K, Chen L. Remember the Saphenous. Pediatric Emergency Care 2011, 27: 1121-1125. PMID: 22134232, DOI: 10.1097/pec.0b013e31823ab926.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAge FactorsAnthropometryAttitude of Health PersonnelBody SizeCatheterization, PeripheralChild, PreschoolEmergency NursingEmergency Service, HospitalFemaleHospitals, PediatricHumansInfantInfusions, IntravenousMaleNursing Staff, HospitalPediatric NursingPoint-of-Care SystemsSaphenous VeinUltrasonography, InterventionalConceptsAntecubital veinSaphenous veinHand veinsPeripheral veinUrban pediatric emergency departmentPediatric emergency departmentNursing preferencePatient characteristicsEmergency departmentSonographic findingsBedside ultrasoundUltrasound guidanceNursing staffMean widthStaff nursesAge groupsSecondary objectiveTransverse diameterFirst choiceUltrasound measurementsVeinSuccess rateSignificant differencesChildrenFuture studies