
Dysuria / UTI
Dysuria
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In a patient presenting with dysuria, use history and dipstick urinalysis to determine if the patient has an uncomplicated urinary tract infection.
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When a diagnosis of uncomplicated urinary tract infection is made, treat promptly without waiting for a culture result.
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Consider non-urinary tract infection related etiologies of dysuria (e.g., prostatitis, vaginitis, sexually transmitted disease, chemical irritation) and look for them when appropriate.
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When assessing patients with dysuria, identify those at higher risk of complicated urinary tract infection (e.g., pregnancy, children, diabetes, urolithiasis).
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In patients with recurrent dysuria, look for a specific underlying cause (e.g., post-coital urinary tract infection, atrophic vaginitis, retention).
UTI
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Take an appropriate history and do the required testing to exclude serious complications of urinary tract infection (UTI) (e.g., sepsis, pyelonephritis, impacted infected stones).
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Appropriately investigate all boys with urinary tract infections, and young girls with recurrences (e.g., ultrasound).
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In diagnosing urinary tract infections, search for and/or recognize high-risk factors on history (e.g., pregnancy; immune compromise, neonate, a young male, or an elderly male with prostatic hypertrophy).
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In a patient with a diagnosed urinary tract infection, modify the choice and duration of treatment according to risk factors (e.g., pregnancy, immunocompromise, male extremes of age); and treat before confirmation of culture results in some cases (e.g.,pregnancy, sepsis, pyelonephritis).
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Given a non-specific history (e.g., abdominal pain, fever, delirium) in elderly or very young patients, suspect the diagnosis and do an appropriate work-up.
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In a patient with dysuria, exclude other causes (e.g., sexually transmitted diseases, vaginitis, stones, interstitial cystitis, prostatitis) through an appropriate history, physical examination, and investigation before diagnosing a urinary tract infection.
See Pediatric UTI.
General Overview
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Anatomic
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Lower: Uretheritis, cystitis
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Upper: Pyelonephritis, renal/perinephric abscess, prostatitis
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Clinical
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Complicated - risk of treatment failure
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Anatomic or functional abnormality of urinary tract (enlarged prostate, stone, diverticulum, neurogenic bladder)
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Immunocompromised host
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Multi-drug resistant bacteria
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Pyelonephritis
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Uncomplicated - Cystitis in immunocompetent nonpregnant healthy woman without anatomic/functional abnormality (regardless of her age according to INESSS 2017)
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Microbiology - KEEPS
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Klebsiella pneumoniae
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E Coli – most common (75-95%), especially in women
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Enterococci – most common in LTC facilities
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Proteus mirabilis – most common in men
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Staph saprophyticus
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Risk Factors for UTI
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Age
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Female
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Neurogenic bladder/urinary incontinence, vesicoureteral reflux, posterior urethral valves, prolapse, BPH
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Indwelling catheter, recent surgery/instrumentation
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Diabetes, other comorbidities
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Sexual activity
DDx for Dysuria
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Infectious
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Cystitis, Pyelonephritis, Urethritis
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Vulvovaginitis, Cervicitis
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Prostatitis, epididiymo-orchitis
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Foreign body
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Urolithiasis
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Dermatologic
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Irritant/Contact dermatitis, lichen sclerosus, lichen planus, psoriasis, Stevens-Johnson, Behçet syndrome
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BPH, urethral stricture
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Neoplastic
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Trauma/surgery
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Interstitial cystitis (bladder pain syndrome)
History
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UTI symptoms (Dysuria, frequent voiding, urgency, hematuria, suprapubic discomfort)
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Pain at start of urination - Urethral
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Pain at end of urination - Bladder
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Complicating conditions (pregnant, co-morbidity, exposure to antibiotics in past 3 months, travel, previous drug-resistant infection)
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Pyelonephritis (Fever/Chills, flank/back pain, nausea/vomiting)
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STI (Vaginal discharge, sexual activity, contraception)
Diagnosis by History for Women
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Highest PPV+ Self-diagnosis of cystitis (86%), absence of vaginal discharge (82%), hematuria (75%), urinary frequency (73%)
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A woman with dysuria/frequency, no risk factors for complicated infection, and no vaginal discharge had a 90% probability of UTI (LR+ = 24.6)
Physical Exam
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Vitals (Febrile, tachycardia, hypotension)
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Abdominal exam
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CVA Tenderness
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Gynecological exam
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Ulcers/vesicles (HSV)
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Vaginal discharge (Vaginitis)
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Cervical motion tenderness (PID)
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Genital (male) exam
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Discharge
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Prostate exam (prostatitis, BPH)
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Rule out prostatitis (DRE) if fever, chills, malaise, myalgias, pelvic or perineal pain, or obstructive symptoms such as dribbling and hesitancy (due to acute urinary retention)
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Consider chronic prostatitis in recurrent cystitis
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Testicle (Epididymo-orchitis)
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Joint effusions (reactive arthritis) and polyarticular tenosynovitis (systemic gonoccocal)
Investigations
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UA if history not clear
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Both LE/Nitrites PPV+ 95%
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LE alone consider urethritis
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Urine culture indicates UTI only if accompanied by symptoms
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Without indwelling catheter >10^5 cfu/mL of <2 species by void, or >10^2 by in-and-out
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With indwelling catheter >10^5 cfu/mL taken from new catheter or <14d since insertion
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Labs (serum creatine, electrolytes)
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r/o STI in sexually active
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Urine color, clarity, odor cannot be used to diagnose UTI (usually due to diet and hydration status)
Treatment
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Do not treat asymptomatic bacteriuria unless pregnant or undergoing GU surgery
Women
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Adjust antibiotic to C&S results
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Empiric antibiotics for simple cystitis
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Nitrofurantoin 100mg PO BID x 5-7d (careful in reduced creatinine clearance)
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TMP-SMX DS 1 tab BID x 3d (if resistance <20%, Quebec has 15% resistance)
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Fosfomycin 3g PO x 1 (appropriate but inferior efficacy)
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Note: Treating with placebo 25-42% of women will clear infection spontaneously, however small risk of progression to pyelonephritis 1/38
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Empiric antibiotics for cystitis in pregnancy
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Nitrofurantoin 100mg PO BID x 7d
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Amoxicillin 500mg PO RID x 5-7d
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Avoid TMP-SMX in first trimester and at term
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Acute Pyelonephritis or complicated cystitis
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Ciprofloxacin 500mg PO BID x7d or Levofloxacin 500mg PO daily x 7d
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Can consider initial intravenous dose: Ceftriaxone 1g IV or 24h dose of aminoglyocoside
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If complicated pyelonephritis consider inpatient IV antibiotics initially and longer 14d course
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Men
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Consider r/o prostatitis, urethritis
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Empiric antibiotics
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Fluoroquinolones (eg. Cipro 500mg PO BID or Levofloxacin 500mg PO daily) x 7-14d
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If afebrile, consider 7d course rather than 14d as per latest JAMA 2021
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Consider shorter courses of fluoroquinolones for uncomplicated pyelonephritis (eg. 7d as per ACP)
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Consider TMP-SMX DS 1 tab BID if culture sensitive
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Urinary Catheter
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Ideally remove catheter prior to antibiotics
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Otherwise intermittent catheterization if possible
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Otherwise replace catheter after antimicrobial therapy started
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7-14 day antimicrobial treatment generally adequate
Prevention
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Hydration, nutrition
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Perineal hygiene
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Healthy voiding habits
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Avoid unnecessary urinary catheters (consider intermittent cathterization)
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Aseptic technique for urinary catheters
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May consider cranberry prophylaxis (eg. juice or tablet)
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May consider discussing antibiotic prophylaxis (continuous x 1 year or postcoital) vs. self-treatment in recurrent UTI (eg. 2+/6mo, 3+/12mo)
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May consider vaginal estrogen therapy in peri/post-menopausal women
References:
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JAMA 2021. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8317010/
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ACP 2021. https://www.acpjournals.org/doi/full/10.7326/M20-7355
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INESSS 2017. https://www.inesss.qc.ca/fileadmin/doc/CDM/UsageOptimal/Guides-serieI/Guide_InfectionUrinaire.pdf
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AAFP 2011. http://www.aafp.org/afp/2011/1001/p771.html
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IDSA 2010. https://academic.oup.com/cid/article-lookup/52/5/e103
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Long Term Care
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Pediatrics