[level-membership-for-obstetrics-gynecology-category]
Chapter 35 RECURRENT URINARY TRACT INFECTION
In the general population, urinary tract infection (UTI) is primarily an infection of sexually active women; the prevalence of UTI in women outnumbers that in men by a ratio of 30:1. However, the prevalence of UTI increases in both sexes with advancing age, reducing the ratio to 2:1. Recurrent UTI is defined as three or more episodes of symptomatic bacteriuria within 1 year. A recurrent infection is one that occurs after documented, successful resolution of an antecedent infection.
Conditions Associated with Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection
Key Historical Features
✓ Previous response to therapy and culture results
✓ Presence of fever, nausea, or malaise
✓ Frequency of infection and temporal relationship to intercourse
✓ History of childhood infections
✓ Medical history, especially history of urolithiasis, known urinary tract abnormality, immunosuppression, or diabetes mellitus
Suggested Work-Up
| Urinalysis | To determine whether the urine contains infectious organisms |
| Urine culture | To document infection, identify the pathogen, and determine the frequency of infection |
| Measurement of blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and creatinine | To evaluate renal function |
| Quantification of postvoid residual bladder volume | To evaluate bladder emptying |
One of the following tests should be considered as well:
| Renal ultrasonography | To evaluate upper urinary tract architecture and establish the presence of hydronephrosis or abscess |
| Intravenous pyelography | To evaluate for filling defects or diagnose obstructive uropathy |
| Computed tomographic (CT) scan | To evaluate anatomic detail and to diagnose the presence of urinary stones |
Additional Work-Up
| Voiding cystography | If an anatomic abnormality is suspected |
| Cystoscopy | If tumor or mass is suspected |
| Urology consultation | For obstructive uropathy, calculi, abscess, or genitourinary abnormalities |
Engel JD, Schaeffer AJ. Evaluation of and antimicrobial therapy for recurrent urinary tract infections in women. Urol Clin North Am. 1998;25:685-701.
McLaughlin SP, Carson CC. Urinary tract infections in women. Med Clin North Am. 2004;88:417-429.
Pewitt EB, Schaeffer AJ. Urinary tract infection in urology, including acute and chronic prostatitis. Infect Dis Clin North Am. 1997;11:623-646.
Yoshikawa TT, Nicolle LE, Norman DC. Management of complicated urinary tract infection in older patients. J Am Geriatr Soc. 1996;44:1235-1241.
[/level-membership-for-obstetrics-gynecology-category][not-level-membership-for-obstetrics-gynecology-category]
Chapter 35 RECURRENT URINARY TRACT INFECTION
In the general population, urinary tract infection (UTI) is primarily an infection of sexually active women; the prevalence of UTI in women outnumbers that in men by a ratio of 30:1. However, the prevalence of UTI increases in both sexes with advancing age, reducing the ratio to 2:1. Recurrent UTI is defined as three or more episodes of symptomatic bacteriuria within 1 year. A recurrent infection is one that occurs after documented, successful resolution of an antecedent infection.
Conditions Associated with Recurrent Urinary Tract Infection
Genitourinary anatomic abnormalities (bladder polyp, urethral diverticula, fistula, medullary sponge kidney)
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