UTIs Flashcards

1
Q

What is the pathophysiology and risk factors associated with UTIs?

A

Normal bowel flora: Bacteroides, GM+ bacilli (anaerobes; clostridium), GM+ cocci, GM- enteric organisms, E. faecalis

most common route is ascending colonization of urethra by fecal flora, can ascend to bladder and kidneys

Risk factors: age (young, elderly; BPH, lower estrogen), female gender, pregnancy, DM, estrogen deficiency, catheter/obstruction/renal dysfunction, neurologic dysfunction, previous ABX use, sexual intercourse, use of diaphragm and spermicides

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2
Q

What are the different types of UTIs? And how do you differentiate them?

A

Lower UTIs: cystitis – bladder infection (most common)
- Dysuria, increased urgency, suprapubic pain, hematuria
Upper UTI: pyelonephritis
- UTI symptoms PLUS flank pain, fever, chills, N/V, CVA tenderness
Urosepsis: significant systemic symptoms and/or bacteremia secondary to UTI
- Fever, tachycardia, tachypnea, hypotension
Prostatitis: intermittent dysuria, recurrent UTIs, ejaculatory pain, fever, myalgia (can be asymptomatic)

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3
Q

What are the common causes of UTIs?

A
  • Polyuria: diuretics, lithium, phenytoin, diltiazem, metronidazole
  • Fever: allopurinol, amphoB, ABX, other infection
  • Hypotension: BP meds, anticholinergics, typical antipsychotics
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4
Q

What are the common pathogens in uncomplicated and complicated UTIs? What about asymptomatic?

A

Uncomplicated: E. coli, P. mirabilis, K. pneumoniae, S. saprophyticus, Enterococcus spp.
Complicated: Pseudomonas, Acinetobacter, E. colli, P. mirabilis, E. faecalis, Staphylococcus spp.
Asymptomatic: E.coli

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5
Q

What is an uncomplicated UTI?

A

Non-pregnant female patients without structural abnormalities or immunocompromise

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6
Q

What is a complicated UTI?

A

Structural abnormalities, males, children, pregnant women, DM, catheters, immunocompromised

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7
Q

How do you define recurrent UTIs?

A

2+ episodes of an uncomplicated UTI in the past 6 months or 3 episodes in the past 12 months

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8
Q

How do you diagnose UTIs?

A

symptoms +/- UA and culture
- Only culture if suspect for complicated UTI, pregnancy or diagnosis uncertainty
o Uncomplicated if failure to respond to empiric therapy or early recurrence (<1 month)

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9
Q

What are important non-drug measures to treat UTIs?

A
  • Surgical procedures to correct deformities
  • Fluid hydration to increase voiding (residual volume of 10ml can alter eradication
  • Probiotics to decrease vaginal pH, reduce colonization if E. coli
  • Cranberry juice/extract (~may reduce rate of recurrence
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10
Q

What are the first and second line therapies for the treatment of uncomplicated UTIs?

A

1: SMP-TMP (or TMP alone) 1 DS PO x 3 days OR
Nitrofurantoin 100mg PO BID-QID x 5 days OR
Fosfomycin 3g PO x 1 dose

2: FQ (Cipro/Levo/Norflox) PO x 3 days OR
Beta-lactams x 3-7 days (avoid ampicillin, amoxicillin alone due to E. coli resistance)

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11
Q

What are the first and second line therapies for CA-complicated UTIs?

A

1: SMP-TMP PO OR Amoxi-clav OR Cefixime OR FQ [duration increased to 7-10 days; up to 14 for FQs]
2: *Dependent upon culture results and risk of resistance

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12
Q

What are the first and second line therapies for uncomplicated pyelonephritis?

A

Uncomplicated: mild-mod illness, manageable dehydration, tolerates PO

1: FQ (Levo or Cipro) x 5-7 days respectively

2: Amoxi-clav PO OR TMP-SMX PO OR TMP PO
[duration increased to 10-14 days]

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13
Q

How do you treat complicated pyelonephritis?

A

AG IV + (ampicillin if Enterococcus suspect) x 10-14 days OR FQ IV x 7-14 days OR
3GC, Cefepime or Pip-tazo x 10-14 days OR
Carbapenems IV x 10-14 days

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14
Q

What are some important considerations for pyelonephritis?

A
  • Fluids + antipyretic PRN, improvement in 72 hrs
  • Consider additional coverage for hospital acquired UTIs (as above + vancomycin, linezolid, dapto for resistant enterococcus)
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15
Q

What are the symptoms of acute bacterial prostatitis? How do you treat it?

A

Symptoms: chills, perineal and low back pain, fever, irritative/obstructive voiding, prostate is tender/swollen

TMP-SMX or FQ x 2-4 weeks
If STI-related: Ceftriaxone + Doxy
[don’t use beta-lactams; poor penetration]

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16
Q

What are the symptoms of chronic bacterial prostatitis? How do you treat it?

A

Symptoms: intermittent urinary tract infection presenting as cystitis, history of recurrent UTIs, prostate exam is usually normal

Same treatment as acute, treat for 4-6 weeks

17
Q

How do you treat recurrent UTIs?

A
  • Short-course self therapy
  • Post-intercourse ppx: single dose within 2 hours after intercourse (TMP-SMX, TMP, nitrofurantoin, cephalexin, FQ)
  • Long-term low-dose ppx: TMP-SMX (1st line), nitrofurantoin, cephalexin, Fosfomycin, FQ, vaginal estrogens
18
Q

What is difference between relapse and reinfection?

A

Relapse/persistence: same bacteria, can occur during or < 2 weeks after therapy
Reinfection: same or different bacteria, occurs > 2 weeks after completion of therapy

19
Q

What are some important considerations for pregnancy and UTIs?

A

Treat to reduce complications once confirmed on 2 consecutive cultures (even if asymptomatic!)
- Safe: amoxicillin, amoxi-clav, cephalexin, ceftriaxone, Fosfomycin
- Avoid: nitrofurantoin (3rd trimester), TMP-SMX/TMP (1st trimester, last 6 weeks of pregnancy), FQs

20
Q

What are some important considerations for breastfeeding and UTIs?

A

FQs, nitro, TMP-SMX, amoxicillin, cephalosporins
- treat for longer duration: 7-14 days uncomplicated/asymptomatic, 14 days for pyelo

21
Q

What are some important considerations for children and UTIs?

A
22
Q

What are some important considerations for catheter-associated UTIs?

A

source control, don’t treat if asymptomatic

Mild-mod symptoms: FQ or ceftriax x 7 days

23
Q

What are some important considerations for DM or candiduria in UTIs?

A

don’t treat if asymptomatic
- Symptoms: choice of antifungal (usually Fluconazole)

24
Q

What are your monitoring parameters for the treatment of UTIs?

A

S&S: Improve within 24 hours, resolved in 72 hours
Urine culture (pregnancy): No bacteria, 2 weeks later, then monthly until birth
Safety Endpoints: prevent ADRs during therapy