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Kimberly Moriarty Case Studies: UTI (70 total points) Beccie is a 25 year old woman who presents with a “48 hour history of needing to urinate frequently, and it hurts when she does”. She also thinks she may have seen blood in her urine but wasn’t sure. (20 total points) 1. What other information about her personal history would you like to know? (4 points) a.last menstrual period b.methods of birth control c.recent sexual activity d.history of STIs 2. List all of the signs and symptoms of UTI you would need to ask the patient about to be able to diagnose a simple UTI. ( 5 points) Dysuria Frequency Hematuria Back pain Beccie reveals the following information: She has never had a UTI before either as an adult or a child. She has no back or flank pain as well as no vaginal irritation or discharge. She takes an oral contraceptive pill and tells you it is extremely unlikely she is pregnant as she had her period last week. She takes no other medications. You take her temperature and it is 36.8ºC. 3. Would you order or perform any tests today? If so, what and why? ( 3 points) Urine analysis and culture with sensitivity. She is presenting with the typical symptoms of a urinary tract infection. Would recommend a STI screening as well to be done with the urine. These could also be symptoms of a STI. 4. Which antibiotic (medication, dose, frequency and duration would you prescribe) and why? (5 points) Bactrim 160/800 1 tab for three days Standard therapy. More compliance with shorter courses. 5. What additional instructions would you include in addition to antibiotic instructions? (3 points) Urination pre/post intercourse Drink plenty of fluids Urinate frequently Wear loose fitting underwear, cotton Lisa, age 4, is brought in to your office by her mother with a 2-day history of fever and irritability. Her mother has noticed that she has been going to the toilet more often and complaining of pain when she passes urine. Lisa has not been eating well but has had no episodes of vomiting. She has had no previous urinary frequency or dysuria that her mother can remember and has no relevant medical history. She is not taking any medications and has no known allergies. On examination her pulse rate is 100 beats per minute and temperature is 37.8°C. She weighs 17 kg and is 102 cm. On palpation her abdomen is soft and her bladder is not palpable. She has no suprapubic tenderness and does not complain of flank pain on examination. There is no evidence of vulvitis. A urinalysis was positive for leukocytes and nitrites. Midstream urine (MSU) was sent for culture and sensitivity. (15 points) 1. What would be your initial step in drug management (if any) before the MSU result is available? If you do decide to prescribe, specify the drug, dose, frequency and duration/course of therapy. (5 points) Trimethoprim (6-12 mg/kg)-sulfamethoxazole (30-60mg/kg) 50/400 mg bid for 7 days 2. What additional advice would you provide? (3 points) Increase fluids, prevent constipation, cranberry juice Return in 3 days if not better, or with a temperature The MSU result is consistent with a UTI. Pure growth of Escherichia coli is reported, with sensitivity to trimethoprim, trimethoprim+sulfamethoxazole, cephalexin, amoxycillin+clavulanate, and gentamicin. 3. Would you continue the same antibiotic, change antibiotic therapy or discontinue antibiotics after the initial course of antibiotic therapy is complete? If you would not discontinue antibiotics, please indicate what you would prescribe, including drug, dose, frequency, and duration if you change medications. If you decide to discontinue the antibiotics, what is your rationale? (4 points) Continue current dosage and course. Extend course if unable to return in a week for ultrasound and VCUG. 4. What further investigation/s (if any) would you order and why? (3 points) Renal and bladder ultrasound. This would check for gross deformities in the structures of the organs. Voiding cystourethrogram. This diagnoses vesicourethral reflux. If she has any abnormalities, they must be fixed to prevent further complications of scarring and damage to the kidneys. You saw LK three days ago or a return OB visit. She is a 19 year old G1P0000 at 28 weeks with a history of UTI 10 weeks ago. At this visit you followed your clinical guidelines for women with a history of UTI in pregnancy and ordered a clean catch, midstream UA with a culture and sensitivity. She has no symptoms of UTI. Here are the results of your tests: (20 points) Nitrates: neg LCE: pos WBCs 10-12 RBCs neg Bact: mod epithelial: mod Culture: 100,000 mixed staph epidermis and lactobacillus Interpret these results: (5 points) Nitrates-neg: normal finding LCE-pos:abnormal finding. May indicate infection urinary tract. Also found in vaginal seceretions WBCs 10-12:normally low (0-4). Indicated some infection/inflammation of the urinary tract. Also can be elevated with vaginal secretions Bact: Mod:normally negative. Could be an indicator of infection Epithelial: Mod: usually none. Means the specimen could be contaminated with skin flora Culture-Mixed: indicated possible contamination. Need another sample Does LK have another UTI? (1 point) No Why or why not? (2 points) No signs and symptoms. Nothing in her UA that is wholly convincing of an infection. Would like another sample to retest. What would you do? If you are prescribing, state the name of the drug, dose, frequency and duration. (4 points) Watch and see. Tell her to increase fluid intake. Return or call is she develops symptoms of a UTI. Educate about pregnancy and increased risk of UTIs. Does pregnancy affect the risk of UTI? If so, why or why not? (4 points) Yes. It increases the risk of developing a UTI. In pregnancy the woman’s urethra dilates, decreases urethral tone, decrease bladder tone and bladder volume increases. All of these things increase the chances of developing a UTI. Clinically, how would you differentiate acute pyelonephritis from an uncomplicated UTI? (4 points) Pyelo is an acute onset of chills, fever, flank pain, malaise and CVA tenderness. These patients also present very VERY sickly looking, and have extremely high temps (I’ve seen 104-105 before). A UTI is acute onset as well, not as severe. Usually does not present with a fever, just the usual frequency and pain with urination. Provide at least three differential diagnosis for EACH of the symptoms of UTI that you identified in this case study, question 2. (20 points) Dysuria: STI, urethritis, vaginitis, urethral trauma Frequency: dysfunctional voiding, urethral syndrome, increased fluid intake, STI, diueresis Hematuria: trauma, interstitial cystitis, kidney stones, cancer Back Pain: kidney stones, pulled muscle, PID, appendicitis