UTI Basics - Pee Problem Primer

- Definition: Microbial infection anywhere along the urinary tract.
- Epidemiology: Females > males; common in young women, elderly.
- Risk Factors: 📌 Sexual activity, Catheterization, Obstruction, Diabetes, Immunosuppression, Pregnancy.
- Classification:
- Site: Upper (pyelonephritis) vs Lower (cystitis, urethritis).
- Complexity: Uncomplicated (healthy female) vs Complicated (e.g., male, catheter, obstruction).
- Pattern: Recurrent UTI (≥2 in 6 months or ≥3 in 1 year); Relapse vs Reinfection.
⭐ Most common cause of uncomplicated UTI is E. coli.
Bugs & Routes - Microbe Mayhem March
- Common Pathogens & Key Associations:
- E. coli: ~80%
- Staphylococcus saprophyticus: Key in young women.
⭐ Staphylococcus saprophyticus is a common cause of UTI in sexually active young women, often called 'honeymoon cystitis'.
- Klebsiella
- Proteus: Struvite stones, alkaline urine; Urease: $Urea + H₂O \rightarrow 2NH₃ + CO₂$
- Enterococcus
- Pseudomonas: Catheter, hospital-acquired
- 📌 KEEPS Mnemonic: Klebsiella, E. coli, Enterococcus/Enterobacter, Proteus/Pseudomonas, S. saprophyticus.
- Routes of Infection:
- Ascending (most common)
- Hematogenous, Lymphatic (both rare)
- Virulence Factors:
- Pili/fimbriae (adhesion)
- Hemolysin
- Urease (Proteus)

Signs & Sleuthing - Symptom Spotter's Guide
- Clinical Features:
Feature Cystitis Pyelonephritis Symptoms Dysuria, frequency, urgency, suprapubic pain, hematuria Fever, chills, flank pain, CVA tenderness, N/V, +/- cystitis sx - Atypical: Elderly (confusion), Children (fever).
- Urinalysis:
- Dipstick: Leukocyte esterase (LE), Nitrites.
⭐ Presence of nitrites on urine dipstick is highly specific for Enterobacteriaceae infection.
- Microscopy: Pyuria (>10 WBCs/hpf), Bacteriuria, RBCs, WBC casts (pyelonephritis).

- Urine Culture:
- Indications: Complicated UTI, pyelonephritis, recurrent UTI, treatment failure, pregnancy.
- Significant Bacteriuria: ≥10⁵ CFU/mL (midstream); ≥10² CFU/mL (symptomatic women/catheter).
Treatment Tactics - Bug Battle Blueprint
- General Measures: ↑Hydration, regular voiding.
- Uncomplicated Cystitis (Outpatient):
- Nitrofurantoin 100mg BD x 5 days
- TMP-SMX DS BD x 3 days
- Fosfomycin 3g single dose
- Avoid fluoroquinolones if alternatives exist.
- Complicated UTI / Pyelonephritis:
- Longer course, broader spectrum (e.g., Fluoroquinolones, 3rd gen Cephalosporins, Aminoglycosides).
- IV for severe cases. Tailor to culture results.
- Pain Relief: Phenazopyridine.
⭐ Nitrofurantoin is a first-line agent for uncomplicated cystitis but should be avoided if GFR < 30-60 mL/min or in suspected pyelonephritis.
Special Cases - Tricky Tract Troubles
- UTI in Pregnancy: Screen & treat ASB. Risks: pyelo, preterm. Safe: Cephalexin, Nitrofurantoin (not term), Amoxicillin. Avoid: FQ, Tetracyclines, TMP-SMX (1st/3rd).
⭐ ASB in pregnancy: screen & treat to prevent pyelonephritis, preterm birth.
- CAUTI: Nosocomial. Dx: symptoms + ≥10³ CFU/mL (catheter). Mgmt: change catheter, treat symptomatic.
- ASB: ≥10⁵ CFU/mL, no symptoms. Treat if:
- Pregnant
- Pre-urologic procedure (mucosal bleed)
- Prostatitis: Linked to recurrent UTI in men.
Prevention & Pitfalls - Defense & Dangers
- Recurrent UTI Prevention:
- Behavioral: Post-coital voiding, adequate hydration.
- Antimicrobial prophylaxis: Continuous low-dose, post-coital.
- Non-antimicrobial: Cranberry (limited evidence), topical estrogen (postmenopausal), D-mannose.
- Complications (Dangers):
- Pyelonephritis, renal/perinephric abscess.
- Papillary necrosis, sepsis/urosepsis.
- Chronic pyelonephritis, renal scarring.
- Xanthogranulomatous pyelonephritis.
⭐ Emphysematous pyelonephritis: a life-threatening necrotizing infection with gas in renal tissues, predominantly affecting diabetic patients.
High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- E. coli is the leading uropathogen in most UTIs.
- Significant bacteriuria is >10^5 CFU/mL; pyuria is crucial for diagnosis.
- Nitrofurantoin, TMP-SMX, and Fosfomycin are first-line for uncomplicated cystitis.
- Complicated UTIs (e.g., males, pregnancy, catheters) need broader/longer antibiotic courses.
- Treat asymptomatic bacteriuria mainly in pregnancy and pre-urologic procedures.
- Sterile pyuria may indicate urogenital TB or Chlamydia.
- CAUTI is the most common hospital-acquired infection; prioritize prevention.
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