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| | ==Definition== |
| | Catheter associated urniary tract infection is defined by presnce of urinary symptoms like urgency, frequency, burning during urination, flank pain in patients with indewlling catheters or suprapubic catheters, and this is applied after exclusion of other possible sources of infection. |
Revision as of 19:55, 27 January 2014
† Acute uncomplicated cystitis: Premenopausal, nonpregnant women with no known urological abnormalities or comorbidities,postmenopausal women or well-controlled diabetes female patient.
‡Avoid if resistance prevalence is known to exceed 20% or if used for UTI in previous 3 months.
♦Pivmecillinam is available in some European countries, not licensed in US.
Fungal cystitis in the non-neutropenic patient
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Candida
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▸ Fluconazole 200 mg PO/IV ×7-14 days
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Alternative
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▸ Amphotericin B 0.3 - 0.6 mg/kg IV once daily×1-7 days
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- Being the most common cause of cystitis(75-90%), E.Coli susceptibility test should be considered to choose the appropriate empirical antimicrobial.Other organisms like Proteus mirabilis, Klebsiella pneumoniae and Staphylococcus saprophyticus are far less common.
- Nitrofurantoin, fosfomycin and mecillinam are prefered as first line treatment because have less resistance among other antibacterials.
- TMP-SMX is preferred to use in areas where the resistance rates are less than 20%
- Nitrofurantoin, fosfomycin and mecillinam shouldn't be used when pyelonephritis is suspected, because they have weak penetration to the renal tissue.
- Use of broad-spectrum antimicrobials resulted multi-drug resistant organisms, so they are used as alternative to the first line drugs in case of allergy, availability, or tolerance.
Definition
Catheter associated urniary tract infection is defined by presnce of urinary symptoms like urgency, frequency, burning during urination, flank pain in patients with indewlling catheters or suprapubic catheters, and this is applied after exclusion of other possible sources of infection.
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