8- UTI Flashcards
is precise anatomic localization of the UTI needed for effective management
no
presentation of cystitis
symptomatic infection or inflammation of the bladder
- Dysuria, frequency, urgency
- Rare sx: hematuria, change in urine odor
T/F UTI in males are usually considered to be complicated becaus they occur with functional or anatomical changes of the urinary tract
T
most common cause of UTI in a healthy indv
E coli
non e coli gram -
enterococci
examples of situations with complicated cystitis
- history or suggestive symptoms of obstruction (stones, cancer)
- condition that prevents you from empyting your baldder (neurogenic bladder)
- a weakened immune system
- enlarged prostate gland
- presence of urinary catheter
T/F a pretherapy urine culture is needed for complicated cystitis diagnosis
T (you have an increase risk of resistant microorganism)
management of all patients with suspected acute complicated UTI
urine for urinanalysis (by microscopy or dipstick)
culture with susceptibility testing
Classes of UTI according to anatomical site
- Lower UTI (cystitis)
- Upper UTI (pyelonephritis)
- Catheter related urinary tract infections (CAUTI)
- Asymptomatic bacteriuria
T/F the clinical presentation of UTI varies with anatomic site of infection
T
Presentation of pyelonephritis
Is symptomatic infection or inflammation of the kidneys
- flank/back pain, fever, tenderness over the costovertebral angle
- Maybe sx: abdominal tenderness, tachycardia, hypotension
Role of CT in acute complicated UTI
to detect anatomic or physiologic factors associated with acute complicated UTI
• CT w/out contrast is for demonstrating calculi, gas-forming infections,
hemorrhage, obstruction, and abscesses
• Contrast is needed to demonstrate alterations in renal perfusion
• CT findings of pyelonephritis include localized hypodense
lesions due to ischemia induced by marked neutrophilic infiltration and edema
• The CT can be normal in patients with mild infection
Should you admit all pts with acute complicated UTI
no, admit those who are septic or critically ill, or have a persistent high fever, pain, marked debility, inability to maintain oral hydration or take oral medications
TX for uncomplicated cystitis
first line (5-7 days)
Nitrofurantoine
trimethoprim/sulphametoxazole
Phosphomycin
TX for complicated cystis or pyelonephritis
this is empiric tx while waiting for urine culture:
- piperacillin/tazobactam
- cefepime
- ceftazidime
IF pt has RF for antimicrobial resistant use:
meropenem
imipenem
Define CAUTI; its main RF is
At least a positive urine culture with a bacterial
load ≥103 CFU/mL in a catheterized patient with
sign or symptoms of UTIs after excluding other
potential infectious sites (as symptoms are often
non specific in a catheterized patient)
- Main risk factor: duration of catheterisation