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Urinary Tract Infections David Spellberg, M.D., FACS
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UTI OVERVIEW Cystitis Urethritis Trigonitis Urethral syndrome
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Cystitis Inflammation of the bladder, can be bacteriologic, non-bacterial,complicated vs. uncomplicated
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Urethritis Inflammation of the urethra; difficult to distinguish from cystitis in women
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Trigonitis Localized hyperemia of the trigone and floor of the bladder
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Urethral Syndrome Frequency, urgency, dysuria, suprapubic discomfort and pressure, voiding difficulties, with pyuria in the absence of organic pathology ( negative urine C&S)
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Risk factors Female: male ratio 8:1 60% adult females have had a UTI in their lifetime Increasing incidence with age Inefficient bladder emptying Decreased functional ability Hospital nosocomial infections
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Routes of infection Ascending Hematogenous Lymphatic
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Microbiology 80% of bacteriuria in UTI’s are gram negative bacilli E. coli most common Gram positives: staph, strep, enterococcus Yeast Rarely anaerobes, tapeworms
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Female risk factors Physiologic changes: decreased vaginal glycogen and rising pH Sexual intercourse, diaphragm & spermicide use Constipation Systemic factors: diabetes, incontinence, dementia, neurologic disorders
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Host defenses Urine osmolality and low pH Normal & complete periodic voiding Vaginal estrogen levels
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Symptoms Lower tract: dysuria, frequency, nocturia, suprapubic pressure, urgency Upper tract: fever, chills, flank pain
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Diagnosis History Physical exam: temperature, abd and flank exam Urine sample
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Bacterial Virulence Ability to adhere to mucosal cells Develop drug resistance Indwelling catheters,urinary obstruction, stone disease
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Urine dipstick Nitrite positive; very specific but not sensitive. False positive with beets, meds Leukocyte esterase; both specific and sensitive. Enzyme in neutrophil granules.
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Urine microscopy Uncentrifugated. 2-6 leukocytes/hpf. Greater then 10 WBC’s/ml Culture not necessary generally with history and above findings.
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Urine cultures Collect if screening urine is inconclusive, recurrent infection, prior infection unresolved with antibiotics, sign or symptoms of upper tract UTI
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Culture results Traditionally > 100,000 colonies per field Now> 100 colonies in symptomatic pts
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Imaging Ultrasound CT urogram IVP VCUG
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TREATMENT Rest Hydration Cranberry juice Urinary analgesics; Prosed DS,
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Antibiotics Ideal antibiotic; higher bladder concentration than other tissues. Ampicillin- 25% yeast vaginitis tetracycline- 80% yeast vaginitis nitrofurantoin- no serum level TMP-SMX- moderate bowel effects but 39% E.coli resistance
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First infection Single dose regimens; higher failure in diabetes, pregnancy, anatomic abnormalities 3 day vs. 7 day; some studies show equal effectiveness, less side effects, better compliance
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Treatment Start 3 day TMP-SMX, cefadroxil, or cephalexin, (uncomplicated acute cystitis, no allergy, no recent antibiotics, no hospitalization) Nitrofurantoin; 7 day treatment Quinolones; if allergic to above, complicated cystitis, severe symptoms, failed previous treatment
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Recurrence C & S helps distinguish relapse of same bug vs. re-infection Upper tract evaluation cystoscopy
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Long term management Behavior changes; stop spermicides, post coital voiding, bowel programs, increased water intake Old fashioned treatment- daily suppressive antibiotic 30-180 days then re-evaluate Newer treatment- postcoital prophylaxis, self treatment for symptoms 3-7 days, office visit if not better.
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Post menopausal women Initiate vaginal estrogen replacement Bladder Control treatment Bowel programs
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Questions?
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