DISPOSITION
Admission Criteria
- Sepsis
- Inability to take oral antibiotics if needed
- Acute emergencies from primary GI disease or malignancies
Discharge Criteria
- No evidence of sepsis
- Able to tolerate oral antibiotics if UTI present
FOLLOW-UP RECOMMENDATIONS
Urogenital specialist (Urology or Gynecology) follow-up is required.
PEARLS AND PITFALLS
- Suspect a urinary tract fistula in the patient with the appropriate risk factors (usually a complicated recent pelvic surgery) and recurrent UTIs
- In the presence of urinary tract fistula, malignancy is always an important diagnostic consideration
- Urine leakage from the vagina may be confused with urinary incontinence
ADDITIONAL READING
- Basler J. (2012, Jan 23). Enterovesical fistula. Retrieved from
www.emedicine.com
.
- Garely AD, Mann WJ Jr. (2012, Jul 30). Vesicovaginal, urethrovaginal, and ureterovaginal fistulas. Retrieved from
www.uptodate.com
.
- Katz VL. Urinary fistula. In:
Comprehensive Gynecology.
5th ed. St. Louis, MO: Mosby; 2007.
- Vasavada SP. (2011, Sep 14). Vesicovaginal and ureterovaginal fistula. Retrieved from
www.emedicine.com
.
- Wein AJ. Urinary tract fistula. In:
Campbell-Walsh Urology
. 9th ed. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders; 2007.
See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)
UTIs, Adult
CODES
ICD9
- 596.1 Intestinovesical fistula
- 599.1 Urethral fistula
- 619.0 Urinary-genital tract fistula, female
ICD10
- N32.1 Vesicointestinal fistula
- N36.0 Urethral fistula
- N82.0 Vesicovaginal fistula
URINARY TRACT INFECTIONS, ADULT
Paul A. Szucs
•
Barnet Eskin
BASICS
DESCRIPTION
- Colonization of urine with uropathogens and invasion of genitourinary (GU) tract
- Defined as urinary symptoms with ≥10
2
to 10
5
CFU/mL of uropathogen and ≥10 WBC/mm
3
- Lifetime risk of UTI in women is >50%
- Uncomplicated cystitis:
- Females aged 13–50
- Symptoms <2–3 days
- Not pregnant
- Afebrile (temperature <38°C)
- No flank pain
- No costovertebral angle tenderness (CVAT)
- Fewer than 4 UTIs in past year
- No recent instrumentation or previous GU surgery
- No functional/structural GU abnormality
- Not immunocompromised
- Neurologically intact
- Complicated cystitis:
- Do not meet above criteria
- Male gender
- Patients with anatomic, functional, or metabolic abnormalities of GU tract
- Postvoid residual urine
- Catheters
- Resistant pathogens
- Recent antimicrobial use
- Uncomplicated pyelonephritis:
- Renal parenchymal infection
- Dysuria, frequency, urgency
- Fever, chills, myalgias, nausea, vomiting
- Flank, back, or abdominal pain
- CVA tenderness
- Leukocytosis (common)
- Complicated pyelonephritis:
- Renal parenchymal infection
- Temperature >40°C
- Urosepsis with septic shock
- Intractable nausea, vomiting
- Diabetes, other immunosuppression
- Pregnancy (especially latter half)
- Concomitant obstruction or stone
- Asymptomatic (occult)
ETIOLOGY
- Mechanism:
- Organisms colonize periurethral area and subsequently infect the GU tract.
- Risk factors:
- Population:
- Newborn, prepubertal girls, young boys
- Sexually active young woman
- Postmenopausal woman, elderly males
- Behavior:
- Sexual intercourse, spermicides, diaphragms
- Elderly females/postmenopausal state
- Less efficient bladder emptying, bladder prolapse, alteration of bladder defenses
- Increased vaginal pH
- Contamination due to urinary or fecal incontinence (Enterobacteriaceae)
- Instrumentation:
- Elderly males due to prostatic hypertrophy and instrumentation
- Organisms:
- Escherichia coli
(80–85%)
- Staphylococcus saprophyticus
(10%)
- Other (10%): Klebsiella,
Proteus mirabilis
,
Enterobacter
spp.,
Pseudomonas aeruginosa
, group D streptococci
DIAGNOSIS
SIGNS AND SYMPTOMS
- Lower tract infection: Cystitis:
- Dysuria, frequency, urgency, hesitancy
- Suprapubic pain
- Hematuria
- Upper tract infection: Pyelonephritis:
- Symptoms of cystitis:
- Fever, chills
- Flank pain and/or tenderness
- Nausea, vomiting, anorexia
- Leukocytosis
- Up to 50% of patients with cystitis may actually have pyelonephritis:
- Symptom duration >5 days, homelessness, and recent UTI are risk factors for upper tract infection
- Elderly or frail patients:
- Altered mental status
- Anorexia
- Decreased social interaction
- Abdominal pain
- Nocturia, incontinence
- Syncope or dizziness
ESSENTIAL WORKUP
- Urinalysis (dipstick test, microscopy)
- Females: Rule out pregnancy, urethritis, vaginitis, pelvic inflammatory disease (PID)
- Males: Rule out urethritis, epididymitis, prostatitis; inquire about anal intercourse/HIV.
- Urologic evaluation in young healthy males with 1st UTI is
not
routinely recommended.
DIAGNOSIS TESTS & NTERPRETATION
Lab
- Rapid Urine Screen:
- Dipstick (leukocyte esterase + nitrite) most effective when urine contains 10
5
CFU/mL
- Lab specimen unnecessary if pyuria and bacteriuria confirmed by dipstick
- Leukocyte esterase: Positive likelihood ratio (LR+) ∼5, negative likelihood ratio (LR−) ∼0.3
- Nitrite: LR+ ∼30, LR− ∼0.5
- Urinalysis/microscopy:
- Obtain if rapid urine screen is unavailable or negative in patients with presumed UTI.
- 10 WBC/mm
3
in clean catch midstream urine indicates infection.
- Bacteria detected in unspun urine indicates >10
5
CFU/mL. (LR+ ∼20, LR− ∼0.1)
- Indications for urine culture:
- Complicated UTIs
- Negative rapid urine screen or microscopy in patients with presumed UTI
- Persistent signs and symptoms after 2–3 days of treatment
- Recurrence (relapse vs. reinfection)
- Recently hospitalized patients
- Nosocomial infections
- Pyelonephritis
Geriatric Considerations
- Asymptomatic bacteriuria (including positive cultures) occurs in 20% of women >65 yr, 50% of women >80 yr and generally should
not
be treated.
- Consider treating symptomatic geriatric patients for 5–10 days to decrease risk of recurrent or persistent bacteriuria.
- Fluoroquinolones may cause CNS side effects.
Imaging
- Indicated for complicated upper tract disease (see Pyelonephritis)
- Helical CT, renal ultrasound, or IV pyelogram if concomitant stone or obstruction suspected
Diagnostic Procedures/Surgery
Patients with significant hematuria, recurrent UTI with same uropathogen, or symptoms of obstruction
need
urologic evaluation to identify structural or functional abnormality.
DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS
- Appendicitis
- Diverticulitis
- Epididymitis
- Nephrolithiasis
- PID/cervicitis
- Prostatitis
- Pyelonephritis
- Urethritis
- Vulvovaginitis
TREATMENT