Week 5: Urinary Tract Infections Flashcards
1
Q
Cystitis symptoms.
A
Irritation of the lower urinary tract mucosa
- dysuria
- urgency
- increased frequency of urination
- suprapubic tenderness, pelvic discomfort
- small volume voiding
- increased # WBCs in the urine (pyuria)
2
Q
Pyelonephritis symptoms
A
Ascension of the bacterial to the kidney from lower urinary tract but can also be from hematogenous spread
- fever
- flank pain and tenderness
- CVA tenderness
- nausea and vomiting
3
Q
Who get’s UTIs?
A
- males in neonatal period
- majority are adult females
- postmenopausal women due to loss of estrogen that causes change in vaginal flora
- males >50s yo due to BPH
- other risk factors: kidney stones, catheters, DM, immunosuppressed, neurogenic bladder, pregnant women
4
Q
Microbiology of UTIs
A
- E coli (75-95%). Enterobacteriaceae (Porteus and Klebsiella pneumonia)
- Staph saprophyticus
5
Q
Virulence mechanisms of UTIs
A
- bacterial adhesion onto urothelial cells
- virulene usually with serotype O e.coli
- 2 adhesins (pap and sfa) at tip of fimbriae (pili) and also nonfimbriae adhesions promote adherence onto urothelial cells and biofilm growth
- enterobacteriaciae are too small to overcome negative charge of epithelial cells so need fimbriae or other adhesion system
- epithelial cells internalize E coli cells, LPS produced from E coli induces production of cytokines in kidney that causes increased complement to gain entry into bladder
6
Q
Urinanlysis findings in UTI
A
- leukocyte esterase: dipsticks in use can detect >10 leukocytes per high power field (abnormal is more than 10)
- nitrite (enterobacteriacea): the bacteria metabolizes nitrate to nitrite.
7
Q
Indications for urine culture when UTI suspected
A
- is symptoms persist within 3 months
- women with negative leukocyte esterase but positive symptoms
- all women with acute pyelonephritis
8
Q
Treatment of uncomplicated cystitis and pyelonephritis
A
- Nitrofurantoin monohydrate
- trimeoprim-sulfamethoxazole (Bactrim)
- Fluoroquinolones
9
Q
Prostatitis: cause, symptoms, treatment
A
- Cause: reflux of infected urine into glandular prostatic tissue via ejaculatory and prostatic duct. E coli, Enterococcus spp., Proteus
- symptoms: fevers, chills, malaise, dysuria, low back pain, painful ejaculation
- dx: PE has warm tender enlarged prostate
- Rx: depends on gram stain in determining spectrum of antimicrobials, TMP-SMX or fluoroquinolones for gram negative rods. Tetracyclines and macrolide have good penetration into prostatic fluid