Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Traveler's diarrhea wikipedia , lookup
Common cold wikipedia , lookup
Neonatal infection wikipedia , lookup
Infection control wikipedia , lookup
Clostridium difficile infection wikipedia , lookup
Childhood immunizations in the United States wikipedia , lookup
Hospital-acquired infection wikipedia , lookup
Management of multiple sclerosis wikipedia , lookup
9 million doctor visits/year! Customary urine test is the dip stick and the mid-stream culture of voided urine. Up to 77% of cystitis cases are cultured Traditionally- >100,000 (10⁵)CFUs was called diagnostic of either UTI (bladder infection present) or asymptomatic bacteruria. More recently as little as 100 CFUs in a voided sample has been positively correlated with coliform (such as E. coli) bladder infection The problem with this cut off: Many labs will call 0 to 10,000 CFUs (<10⁴) as a negative culture The way the urine test is done, diluting out the urine 1000 times, there may be no growth on the agar plates despite a bladder infection being present What does the results of the urine culture tell you ? 202 paired samples of mid stream collected urine cultures and catheterized bladder cultures in young woman who had symptoms of uncomplicated cystitis, no features of pyelonephritis 70% of bladder cultures positive 78% of voided mid-stream cultures positive As few as 10 CFUs of mid-stream cultures of E. coli or Klebsiella pneumoniae– highly correlated with a true bladder infection ( 93% PPV). In contrast – 22% of mid- stream cultures grew enterococcus or Group B strep- at even 100,000 (10⁵ CFUs) – there was no correlation with bladder cultures- These bugs were not found in the corresponding bladder culture, but E.coli was still cultured in the bladder (but not in the mid-stream culture) in 62% of these cases ! Take Home Message: I. a young woman with classic cystitis symptoms can have a documented bladder infection, but her midstream urine culture can still be a false negative test ( too few CFUs to be detected on standard urine cultures) II. Positive mid-stream cultures for enterococcus and Group B strep are most likely contaminants III. In uncomplicated cases- obtaining cultures as a guide to therapy can be counter productive: either not treating patients with actual infection, or treating patients for the wrong bacteria. Ask the patient “do you feel like you have a bladder infection- do you have both a sense of urgency and burnig when you urinate?” Do a dip stick and treat only if leukocytes or nitrite positive? Send the urine for culture, wait 2 days, and treat the patient only if >100,000/ml colonies Symptoms only: +dysuria, +frequency, no discharge or irritation:***90% chance of cystitis*** Dipstick: leukocyte esterase + and/or nitrite + only 75% sensitive, so symptoms more important even if dip is negative Culture:10⁵ (100,000) bacterial CFU- traditional criterion of UTI- 50% sensitive -will miss up to half of cases of UTI – counts of 100 to 10,000 colonies – all at levels that may be called as “no growth” by micro lab. Least sensitive diagnostic test **Rarely progresses to severe disease even if untreated: goal is to ameliorate symptoms In selecting therapy, efficacy as well as “ecologic collateral damage” (selecting for antibiotic resistant bacteria, C. difficile colitis) should be considered equally- fluoroquinolones should be avoided, except in pyelonephritis Nitrofurantoin, Septra, fosfomycin are therefore first line agents Definition: presence of bacteria >100,000 cfu/ml in urine of an individual without signs or symptoms of UTI. This definition is independent of the presence or absence of pyuria, odor, cloudy urine Very Common: i. Young healthy women : 3 to 5% i. Pregnant women: 2 to 9.5% ii. Women aged 65-80 years: 18 to 43% iii. Women > 80 years: up to 43% iv. Men 65-80 years: 2 to 15% Causes: Obstructive uropathy, neuromuscular disease, perineal soiling in dementia, etc Traditional teaching: the presence of bacteriuria defines a population at risk, therefore: Eliminating the “asymptomatic UTI” (oxymoron) minimizes the risk for a clinically symptomatic disease Modern Teaching: NO benefit to treatment (except in pregnancy and before urologic procedure). Term changed to “asymptomatic bacteriuria” 3 to 5% of young women have ABU What role does this have in recurrent UTI’s? Many women get follow-up urine studies and re-treatment after initial therapy for UTI. Study in Clinical Inf. Disease -9/15/2012: 673 healthy non-pregnant woman followed after first UTI for one year.- all were treated again at any time if had symptomatic UTIs. urine cultures were also obtained at 3, 6 and 12 months-if positive but if patient asymptomatic only half were treated, other half were not Results after one year of observation: Those treated for ABU- 46.8% had a symptomatic UTI later during the year Those not treated for ABU- only 13.1% had another UTI! Conclusion: The paradoxical result was increased incidence of symptomatic UTIs in patients given antimicrobials for asymptomatic bacteruria! Bacterial interference- the inability of pathogenic bacteria to set up a bladder infection due to blockage by commensal bacteria colonizing the bladder- was disrupted by the treatment of ABU. Conclusion :The human microbiome is a potent defense mechanism against superinfecting pathogenic bacteria. Applies to the bladder, as well as the GI tract and other sites. Antibiotic treatment of ASB does not reduce frequency of symptomatic UTI Treatment of ASB in diabetes does not reduce adverse outcomes, improve glucose control, or reduce symptomatic UTIs It does lead to untreatable drug resistant bacteria, c.diff,etc Only exceptions are pregnancy where asymptomatic bacteriuria is associated with pyelonephritis, growth retardation, neonatal death… and patients undergoing urologic procedures (such as prostate bx) 30 year old healthy woman Acute dysuria, frequency for 5 days, no fever or CVAT Urine dip negative- Would you treat now? No treatment given- 2 days later- urine culture <10,000 CFU’s of Klebsiella . Treat now? Did you need to culture her? Given nitrofurantoin, patient’s dysuria resolves, instructed to returns 2 weeks later for follow-up u/a and culture:dip –positive, culture grows > 100,000 cfu/ml of Enterococcus . Treat now? second hospitalization in 2 weeks of 77 year old woman seen by me for drug resistant UTI: Has Parkinson’s Disease, A.fib- feels weak when she stands up, no GU symptoms- admitted by primary M.D. to hospital with pyuria, drug resistant Klebsiella- given iv antibiotics for a few days, goes home. seen in f/u by her doctor– same complaints– readmitted. Despite prior Rx, same u/a and culture results- now put on meropenem, still no change in her symptoms Many older patients get screening u/a’s and reflex cultures even when they don’t have urgency and burning symptoms. They are then treated for a “UTI”. This is a too common mistake… “older patients should not be tested or treated for UTI unless they have symptoms” If you are treated for a true UTI: no follow-up test of cure should be performed Antibiotics: have side-effects can cause future problems like yeast infection and colitis lead to drug resistant bacteria are a waste of money Think twice before ordering a urine culture- go by symptoms and signs. Only culture in possible pyelonephritis, unclear diagnosis, complicated cases or treatment failure Consider Macrodantin or Septra as first line therapy, quinolones if they are ill Mid-stream culture results with enterococcus and GBS can be deceiving – rarely cause of UTI. Most likely still E. coli If the patient is asymptomatic –if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it!