Management of urinary tract infection in women: A practical approach for everyday practice

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wolters Kluwer Medknow Publications

Abstract

A common health-care problem worldwide, urinary tract infection (UTI), represents a disease of significant impact on every country's economy, being the most common cause of hospitalization among elderly people and the most common cause of antibiotic prescription in primary care. Diagnosing and managing upper and lower UTI have always been a challenge to physicians, given its high prevalence, risk of recurrence and improper treatment, and the fact of worldwide increase in antibiotic resistance, necessitating implementation of a proper antibiotic stewardship. Urinary infections are twice more likely to occur in females compared to males and its prevalence increases with increasing age. The following is a comprehensive review paper about UTI in females, discussing the various factors leading to a complicated infection. The various etiologies and microbiologies of UTI are also highlighted. In addition to various usual antibiotic regimens for treating UTI, a significant number of nonantimicrobial treatment modalities are highlighted and described in this manuscript, including the novel use of intravesical antibiotics and vaccines for suppression treatment. Finally, a pathway is suggested for the proper diagnosis and treatment that ensures antibiotic stewardship in order to decrease long-term complications. © 2019 Medknow Publications. All rights reserved.

Description

Keywords

Antibiotics, Intravesical, Nonantimicrobial therapy, Pregnancy, Stewardship, Urinary tract infection, Vaccines, Women, Alkalinizing agent, Antibiotic agent, Cotrimoxazole, Estrogen, Fosfomycin, Nitrofurantoin, Om 89, Probiotic agent, Quinolone derivative, Antibiotic prophylaxis, Antibiotic therapy, Antimicrobial stewardship, Bacterial clearance, Clinical pathway, Cranberry, Disease management, Female, Human, Medical procedures, Microbiology, Pathogenesis, Priority journal, Prophylaxis, Review, Treatment failure, Urinary alkalinization

Citation

Collections

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By