10 - UTIs Flashcards
What are some clinical manifestations of hypomagnesiumia?
- Weakness
- Fatigue
- Muscle cramps
- Tetany
- Numbness
- Seizures
- Arrhythmias
Why do kidney’s get bigger in early diabetic neuropathy?
Hyperfiltration due to hyperglycaemia making the macula densa think GFR is low, so hypertrophy - need to give antihypertensives
Explanation: more glucose filtered so more is re-abosrbed in PCT with sodium. means less sodium in filtrate in the DCT sensed by the macula densa and thinks GFR has decreased
Therefore RAAS activated and afferent arteriole is dilated and efferent constricted to try increase GFR as the kidney can’t sense the DM
What is the most common cause of nephrotic syndrome?
Adults: membranous GN
Child: minimal change disease
What is the likely diagnosis?
Minimal change disease
- Do a renal biopsy
- Urine dipstick
What is the most likely cause of this?
VASCULITIS
(could also be SLE)
What are the different types of upper and lower urinary tract infections?
- Pyelonephritis (kidney)
- Cystitis (bladder)
Most common cause of gram negative sepsis
What defence mechanisms do we have against UTIs?
- Vesico-ureteral valves
- Mucosal barries
- Acidic urine
- Emptying of bladder washing organisms
- Antibacterial/immunological secretions into urine
What are some risk factors for developing a UTI?
- Female: shorter urethra
- Neurological: incomplete emptying e.g MS, stroke
- Obstruction: pregnancy, stones, enlarged prostate, tumours
- Pregnancy: relaxation of muscle and obstruction
- DM and immunosupression
- Catheter
- Vesico-ureteric reflux (usually children)
What bacteria cause UTIs?
- Gram negative rods, especially coliforms like E.Coli
- Coagulase negative staphylococci e.g staph saprophyticus, in young women and hospitalised patients
- P.Aeruginosa and other gram negatives in hospital as antibioti selective pressure
What are e.coli’s virulence factors for a UTI?
- Flagella: movement
- Pili: attachement
- K antigen: colonisation
What is the clinical presentation of cystitis and pyelonephritis?
What are some other causes of dysuria apart from cystitis?
- STIs
- Post sexual intercourse
- Contact with irritants
- Symptoms of menopause and vaginal atrophy
What is the difference between a complicated and uncomplicated UTI?
Complicated there is at least one factor that predisposes a patient to persistent infection, recurrent infection or treatment failure, e.g structural abnormality
How should we collect a urine specimen?
- Midstream urine collection (hold labia open)
- Culture urine within 4 hours or refrigerate/boric acid preservative.
- Need to do all of this to prevent contamination
(collection bag, suprapubic aspiration, catheter sample)
When should you culture urine not just dipstick?
- Pregnancy
- Treatment failure
- Recurrent infections
- Suspected pyelonephritis
- Male
- Children