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Urinary Problems and Injuries, Age 11 and Younger

Overview

Urinary problems and injuries are a concern in children. A young child may not be able to tell you about any symptoms. This can make it hard to decide what your child needs. An older child may be embarrassed about the symptoms. When your child has a urinary problem or injury, look at all of the symptoms to decide what steps to take next.

The urethra, bladder, ureters, and kidneys are the structures that make up the urinary tract, Opens dialog.

Pain during urination (dysuria) and a frequent need to urinate are common symptoms in young children. When your child has only one of these symptoms, or when the symptoms are mild, home treatment may be all that's needed to prevent the problem from getting worse and help relieve symptoms. Mild symptoms include:

  • A frequent need to urinate. A child's bladder is small and doesn't hold as much urine as an adult's bladder. For this reason, frequent urination is common. It may not be a sign of a urinary problem. Your child may urinate more often because of drinking extra fluid or feeling nervous. Or it may simply be from habit.
  • Burning pain when urine touches irritated skin around the vagina, Opens dialog or urethra. Pain during urination because of skin irritation occurs more often in girls (genital skin irritation) than it does in boys.

These symptoms can also mean that your child has a urinary tract infection, Opens dialog. Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the second most common bacterial infection in children. When your child has an infection, bacteria grow in the bladder and irritate the bladder wall. This causes pain as soon as a very small amount of urine reaches the bladder. You may find your child trying to urinate more often than usual to try to soothe the pain. But your child will pass very little urine because the bladder has only collected a small amount since the last time they urinated. Symptoms of a UTI vary depending on a child's age.

Urine color and odor

Many things can affect urine color, including fluid balance, diet, medicines, and diseases. How dark or light the color is tells you how much water is in it. Vitamin B supplements can turn urine bright yellow. Some medicines, blackberries, beets, rhubarb, and blood in the urine can turn urine red-brown. A urinary tract infection (UTI) can make urine cloudy, darker than normal, or both cloudy and darker.

Some foods (such as asparagus), vitamins, and antibiotics (such as penicillin) can cause urine to have a different odor. A sweet, fruity odor may be caused by uncontrolled diabetes. A urinary tract infection (UTI) can cause a bad odor.

Newborns and children younger than 2

Babies and very young children who have UTIs often have symptoms that don't seem specific to the urinary tract. Symptoms may include:

  • A fever, especially without other signs of infections, such as a cough or runny nose. In babies, a fever may be the only symptom of a UTI.
  • Urinating more or less often than usual.
  • Strong or bad-smelling urine.
  • Dark or blood-streaked urine. But note that it's common for newborns to pass some pink urine in the first few days of life. This may be from crystals in the urine. Parents will notice a pink color to the urine in the diaper.
  • Lack of interest in eating, or refusing food.
  • Diarrhea.
  • Vomiting.
  • Squirming and crankiness.
  • Diaper rash, Opens dialog that doesn't go away.

Children age 2 years and older

Young children who have a UTI often have symptoms that are more clearly related to the urinary tract. Symptoms may include:

  • Burning with urination (dysuria). This is the most common symptom of a UTI.
  • A fever.
  • Frequent need to urinate (frequency) without being able to pass much urine.
  • A strong desire to urinate (urgency).
  • Strong or bad-smelling urine.
  • Blood in the urine (hematuria). Urine may look pink, red, or brown.
  • Belly pain.
  • Pain in the flank, Opens dialog. This is felt just below the rib cage and above the waist on one or both sides of the back.
  • Vomiting.
  • Discharge from the vagina.
  • Sudden, new daytime wetting after a child has been toilet trained.

UTIs are caused when bacteria such as Escherichia coli (E. coli), which are normally in the digestive tract, enter the urinary tract. Two common types of UTIs are:

  • Bladder infections, Opens dialog. They occur when bacteria get into the bladder by traveling up the urethra.
  • Kidney infections, Opens dialog. They usually occur when bacteria get into a kidney by traveling from the bladder up the ureters. Kidney infection also may occur if bacteria from an infection in another part of the body travel to the kidneys through the bloodstream.

Except during the first 3 months of life, girls are more likely than boys to have urinary problems. Girls are also more likely than boys to have more than one UTI.

Babies and young children who have problems with the structure or function of the urinary tract may be more likely to have UTIs. Problems such as vesicoureteral reflux, Opens dialog or an obstruction in the urinary tract may be present at birth (congenital). Or they can be the result of surgery, injury, or past infection.

During the first year of life, boys are more likely than girls to have a structural (anatomic) reason for urinary problems. If your child has a known structural or functional problem with the urinary tract, follow your doctor's instructions about when to seek care for urinary symptoms.

In rare cases, a urinary symptom may be a sign of a more serious illness, such as diabetes, Opens dialog.

An injury, such as getting hit in the back or genital area, may cause urinary problems. A visit to a doctor is usually needed if your child has trouble urinating or can't urinate, or has swelling, severe pain (such as lower back pain), or blood in the urine.

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Information about Urinary Problems and Injuries, Age 11 and Younger

Current as of: April 30, 2024

Author: Ignite Healthwise, LLC Staff

Clinical Review Board
All Healthwise education is reviewed by a team that includes physicians, nurses, advanced practitioners, registered dieticians, and other healthcare professionals.

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