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Title

Urine trouble: should we think differently about UTI?

Authors

Price, Travis K.; Hilt, Evann E.; Dune, Tanaka J.; Mueller, Elizabeth R.; Wolfe, Alan J.; Brubaker, Linda

Abstract

Urinary tract infection (UTI) is clinically important, given that it is one of the most common bacterial infections in adult women. However, the current understanding of UTI remains based on a now disproven concept that the urinary bladder is sterile. Thus, current standards for UTI diagnosis have significant limitations that may reduce the opportunity to improve patient care. Using data from our work and numerous other peer-reviewed studies, we identified four major limitations to the contemporary UTI description: the language of UTI, UTI diagnostic testing, the Escherichia coli-centric view of UTI, and the colony-forming units (CFU) threshold-based diagnosis. Contemporary methods and technology, combined with continued rigorous clinical research can be used to correct these limitations.

Subjects

URINARY tract infection diagnosis; URINARY tract infection treatment; PATHOGENIC microorganisms; ESCHERICHIA coli; BLADDER disease treatment

Publication

International Urogynecology Journal, 2018, Vol 29, Issue 2, p205

ISSN

0937-3462

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s00192-017-3528-8

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