UTI & Pyelonephritis Flashcards

1
Q

UTI and pyelonephritis

A

Infection of the urinary system (kidneys, bladder, urethra) that can lead to pyelonephritis

E. coli is the most common bacterial pathogen and infection in women

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2
Q

Pathophysiology and clinical manifestations

A

UPPER urinary system (kidneys and ureters):
1. Pyelonephritis – inflammation of renal parenchyma; CM: Upper back and flank pain, high fever, shaking and chills, N/V/

LOWER urinary system (urinary bladder and urethra):
1. Cystitis – inflammation of the bladder; CM: Pelvic pressure, lower abdominal discomfort, dysuria, urinary frequency, hematuria

  1. Urethritis – inflammation of the urethra; CM: Burning with urination
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3
Q

Upper vs. lower UTI

A

UPPER UTI – S/S: Fever, flank pain, N/V/

LOWER UTI:
1. Emptying symptoms – Hesitancy, intermittency, post void dribbling, incomplete emptying

  1. Storage symptoms – Urinary frequency, urgency, incontinence, nocturia, nocturia enuresis (bedwetting)
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4
Q

Classification

A
  1. UNCOMPLICATED – UTI that occurs in a normal, unobstructed genitourinary tract, with no history of recent instrumentation, and whose symptoms are confined to the lower urinary tract (bladder)
  2. COMPLICATED – Urinary tract infection and coexisting obstruction, stones, or catheters; DM or neurologic diseases, or pregnancy-induced changes; At risk for urosepsis, pyelonephritis, and renal disease
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5
Q

Risk factors

A

UTI risk factors:
1. Urinary stasis – Due to tumor, stricture, BPH; and/or urinary retention (poor bladder wall, neurogenic bladder)

  1. FB – Calculi, catheters, stents, instrumentation
  2. Anatomic factors – Congenital defects, fistula, obesity
  3. Immune response – Aging, HIV
  4. Functional disorders – Constipation, voiding dysfunction
  5. Other – Pregnancy, multiple sex partners, poor hygiene, nurse’s bladder
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6
Q

Diagnostics

A

Tests:
1. Urinalysis dipstick – Nitrates, WBC, leukocyte esterase (indicates pyuria)

  1. Urine culture – clean catch
  2. Other studies – CT, ultrasound if recurring infections occur
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7
Q

Medical management

A

Lower UTI:

  1. Antibiotics – Trimethoprim (5 days) and Ciprofloxacin (3 days)
  2. No follow-up necessary, unless recurrence

Acute pyelonephritis:

  1. Antibiotics – Empiric, then culture specific
  2. Force fluids
  3. NSAIDs or antipyretic drug therapy
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8
Q

Empiric therapy

A

Antibiotic therapy based on experience, not data (most UTIs respond to broad spectrum treatment)

Risk – Organism may not be sensitive or may have resistance to the antibiotic

Benefit – Quick treatment, no wait on culture

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9
Q

Nursing management

A

LOWER UTI:

  1. Force fluid intake – Flush out bacteria regardless of increased discomfort
  2. Decrease irritants – Coffee, caffeine, ETOH, citrus, chocolate, spiced foods
  3. Pain control – Heat to suprapubic area
  4. Drug therapy – Antibiotics

PYELONEPHRITIS:

  1. Antibiotics (14-21 days) – longer than lower UTI
  2. Fever and pain management
  3. IVF – discharge once patient can tolerate fluids (antibiotics prescribed for 14-21 more days)
  4. Educate pt to be vigilant of new S/S – should resolve within 48-72 hrs.
  5. Urosepsis can result if bacteriuria and bacteremia present
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10
Q

Pt education

A

Lower UTI:
1. Encourage fluid intake

  1. Nutrition – Assess common diet at home, offer substitutions
  2. Pain control – Non-pharmacologic actions
  3. Drug therapy – Encourage pts to complete full round of antibiotics
  4. Avoid – Holding urine for long periods of time, irritating urethra (restrictive clothing), and avoid deodorants or feminine products in genital area
  5. Promote – Wiping front to back after BM, showers (NOT baths), emptying bladder after intercourse, cranberry juice or proanthrocyanidin (reduce recurrent bladder infections)
  6. Notify PCP – Symptoms to not diminish, S/S: Fever, N/V/, flank pain (indicative of increasing infection to upper urinary tract)
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11
Q

Care coordination

A

Coordinate outpatient therapy with family

Ensure pt has adequate water supply and access to a bathroom

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