Urinary tract infections are infections anywhere along the urethra, bladder, ureters and kidneys
Aetiology
Causative organisms
- E. coli most common - EPEC
- Proteus mirabilis - produces urease, which breaks down urea to form ammonia
- Most common cause of UTI in men
- Increases urinary pH → precipitation of salts → staghorn calculus
- Psudomonas aeruginosa - associated with catheters and instrumentation, immunosuppressed
- Most common cause of Catheter-associated UTI
- Resistant to most oral antibiotics except ciprofloxacin
- Enterococcus e.g. enterococcus faecalis more common in hospital aquired infection
- Staphlococcus saphrophyticus - usually affects women of child-bearing age
- Staph. aureus (uncommon) - usually in bacteraemia
Risk factors
- Greater incidence in women
- Short, wide urethra, proximity of urethra to anus, increased risk with sexual activity and pregnancy
- Catheterised patients
- Abnormalities of the urinary tract
Classifications
Category | Definition |
Uncomplicated UTI | Non-pregnant, immunocompetent women, no structural abnormality |
Complicated UTI | Male sex, pregnancy, diabetes, obstruction, catheter, CKD |
Recurrent UTI | ≥2 in 6 months or ≥3 in 1 year |
Pathophysiology
Terminology
- Acute pyelonephritis is when the infection affects the tissue of the kidney
- It can lead to scarring in the tissue and consequently a reduction in kidney function
- Cystitis means inflammation of the bladder, and can be the result of a bladder infection
Bacteria in the normal urinary tract
- Urine in the kidneys, ureters and bladder is normally sterile
- The lower end of the urethra is colonised by bacteria (coliforms and enterococci from the large bowel)
- Bacteriuria is does not always mean infection, especially in elderly patients
- Important to determine if patient is symptomatic
Routes of infection
- Ascending route (common) - bacteria from bowel → perineal skin → lower end of urethra → bladder → ureters → kidneys
- Haematogenous route (uncommon) - bacteraemia/septicaemia seeded into kidneys, multiple small abscesses, bacteria in urine
Natural history
- Uncomplicated UTI: this is a UTI where the anatomy of the urinary tract is normal, and renal imaging will be normal
- No underlying condition contributing to infection
- Unlikely to result in serious kidney damage
- Complicated UTI: this will occur in urinary tracts with stones, and also in diabetes
- The recurrent infections can themselves contribute to stone formation
- The combination of recurrent infection and urinary tract obstruction can result in sever and rapid kidney damage
- In these conditions there is a risk of Gram-negative septicaemia
Clinical presentation
- Dysuria
- Frequency of urination
- Nocturia
- Haematuria
- Features suggestive of upper urinary tract involvement - fever, loin pain, rigors
Investigations
- Midstream specimen of urine (MSU)
- Important as first urine passed is most likely to be contaminated
- Other urine specimens:
- 'Clean catch' - children, cognitive, or physical restriction
- Bag urine - babies
- Catheter specimen of urine
- Suprapubic aspiration
- Dipstick urine may indicate infection in select patients
- Not suitable for urine of elderly or for urine from a catheter specimen
- Leukocyte esterase indicates WBC in urine
- Nitrates indicate bacteria in the urine
- Protein + blood (not necessarily for infection diagnosis)
- Lab analysis (more accurate, used in selected cases) - look for polymorphs (pus cells), bacteria +/- red cells
- Culture of urine - 'significant bacteruria'
- Mixed growth (2+ organisms) is probably due to contamination
Management
Uncomplicated UTI
- Cystitis
- Nitrofurantoin 100mg 2x1 for 5 days
- Cefadroxil 500mg 2x1 for 3 days
- Cotrimoxazole 960mg 2x1 3 days
- Pyelonephritis
- Ciprofloxacin 500mg 2x1 for 7 days
- Levofloxacin 750mg 1x1 for 5 days
- Cotrimoxazole 960mg 2x1 for 14 days
Complicated UTI
- Ceftriaxone 1g/24hr IV
- Ciprofloxacin 400mg/12hr IV
- Levofloxacin 500mg/24hr
Special cases
Abacterial cystitis/urethral syndrome
- Patient has symptoms of UTI
- Pus in urine, but no significant growth on culture
- May be early phase of UTI, may be due to urethral trauma, may be due to urethithris due to STI
Asymptomatic bacteriuria
- Incidental finding
- Antibiotic treatment is generally not required, especially in the elderly
- Treatment required in asymptomatic bacteriuria in pregnancy
UTI in catheterised patients
- Only give antibotics if there is fever/symptoms
- Unnecessary antibiotics result in the catheter becoming colonised with increasinly resistant organisms
Complications
Acute bacterial prostatitis
- Rare complication of UTI in men
- Symptoms of UTI, but may have lower abdominal pain/back/perineal/penile pain and tender prostate on examination
- Same organisms of UTI
- Diagnosis - clinical signs + MSSU for C&S (+/- first pass urine for chlamydia/gonorrhoea tests)
- Management - ciprofloxin for 28 days, trimethoprim 28 days if high C. diff risk