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Diseases of the Urinary & Reproductive Systems Chapter 24 Structures of Urinary System – Kidneys • Nephrons are functional unit (1.25 million per kidney) – Ureters – Urinary bladder – Urethra • Much longer in males Structures of Reproductive System • Females – Urinary and reproductive systems are distinct • Males – Urinary and reproductive systems share components • Normally urine and urinary tract above bladder are sterile – Urethra contains normal resident flora • Lactobacillus, Staphylococcus, Corynebacterium and Streptococcus • Normal flora varies in female genital tract – Depends on hormones • Lactobacillus • Non-venereal diseases of urinary tract – Affect males and females – Urinary tract infections – Leptospirosis Urinary Tract Infections • 8 million cases annually in US – 600,000 nosocomial – May include any or all of the organs • • • • Urethritis – inflammation of urethra Cystits – inflammation of the urinary bladder Ureteritis –inflammation of the ureters Pyelonephritis – inflammation of the kidneys • Causative agents: – Usually intestinal flora • E. coli – most common • Proteus and Klebsiella • Psudomonas – Typically nosocomial – Non-enteric bacteria – Non-invasive and opportunistic • Signs and Symptoms – Dysuria – frequent, painful urination – cloudy urine with foul odor; may have pale red color 9due to blood in urine) – Tenderness of pelvic area – May have slight fever – Pathogens typically ascend urethra and attach to receptors on bladder lining – May form biofilm – Pyelonephritis • Sudden elevation of temperature, chills, vomiting and back pain, bacteremia (may result in septicemia if bacteria gain entrance into the blood stream) • Epidemiology – Typically results from auto-inoculation (except for nosocomial infections) – 30% of women develop UTI – Risk factors include: • short urethra; sex; use of diaphragm; pregnancy, catheterization – Infections less common in men • More common after age 50 • Prostatitis – inflammation of the prostate gland which decreases urine flow • Prevention – – – – Adequate fluid intake (2-4 liters daily) Cranberry juice may help prevent attachment of bacteria Void urine immediately after sex Proper personal hygiene • Treatment – Sulfonamides or cephalosporins Leptospirosis • Zoonotic disease • Causative agent – Leptospira interrogans • Gram -, Spirochete • Double axial filaments • Over 200 antigenic types • Signs & Symptoms – Abrupt onset of headache, spiking fever, chills and severe myalgia – Eye redness • Due to dilation of small blood vessels – ½ of patients develop nausea, vomiting and diarrhea • Requires direct contact with urine or urine contaminated waters or soil • Bacteria enter body through mucous membranes and breaks in skin – Organism multiplies and travels to kidneys in blood stream • Epidemiology – Worldwide distribution – Infects many wild and domestic animals • Asymptomatic carriers – Organism is excreted in urine • Survives in water or moist soil for weeks – Farmers, ranchers, butchers, vets at high risk – Rarely fatal • Prevention – Avoid water contaminated with animal urine • Swimming accounts for a large number of cases – Maintain sanitary conditions for animals – Vaccine available for livestock and pets – Rodent control • Treatment – Oral doxycycline, chloramphenicol, erythromycin – IV penicillin in severe cases • Non-venereal diseases of reproductive tract – Toxic Shock Syndrome • May affect males and females – Bacterial Vaginosis – Vaginal Candidiasis Staphylococcal Toxic Shock Syndrome • Causative agent: Staphylococcus aureus • Virulent strains produce Toxic Shock Syndrome Toxin (TSST1 or TSST2) – binds cells of immune system and triggers excess immune related chemicals be released • Signs & Symptoms – Sudden onset fever, chills, vomiting, diarrhea, extremely low blood pressure, mental confusion and a severe red rash – 50% mortality if untreated • Most cases involve menstruating women – 25% of cases involved wound infection – New mothers and surgical patients also at risk • Prevention – Avoid highly absorbent tampons, diaphragms, contraceptive sponges or use them for shorter periods of time • Treatment – Remove foreign matter or drain infected wound immediately – IV fluids to support blood pressure – Vancomycin and anti-TSST immunoglobulin Bacterial Vaginosis • Causative agent: – May be caused by multiple anaerobic bacteria – Gardnerella vaginalis • Change in vaginal flora – pH increases and allows overgrowth of pathogen • Signs & Symptoms – Thin, grayish-white vaginal discharge • Can be slightly bubbly – Pungent ‘fishy’ odor – Some itching and irritation – 50% asymptomatic • Prevention – No proven prevention – Associated with multiple sexual partners, vaginal douching, anti-microbial therapy • Treatment – Metronidazole – Vinegar douche – Reestablishment of lactobacilli Vaginal Candidiasis • Causative agent – Candida albicans • Normal flora for up to 80% of women • Opportunistic pathogen • Dimorphic • Signs & Symptoms – White mucoid colonies on vaginal mucus membranes and labia – Severe itching and burning – White curd-like discharge • Epidemiology – Can be spread person to person • Mother to newborn • Rarely sexually transmitted – Antibacterial medications increases risk – Other risk factors include birth control, hormone therapy, AIDS, diabetes, invasive hospital procedures and cancers – Changes in vaginal flora and pH • Prevention – minimizing risk factors • Treatment – Intra-vaginal treatment with nystatin and clotrimazole • Cream azoles may weaken latex condoms – Oral fluconazole