Urinary Tract Infections in Patients with Spinal Cord Injury

How to Cite This Chapter: Mertz D, Duława J, Drabczyk R. Urinary Tract Infections in Patients with Spinal Cord Injury. McMaster Textbook of Internal Medicine. Kraków: Medycyna Praktyczna. https://empendium.com/mcmtextbook/chapter/B31.II.14.8.8.?utm_source=nieznany&utm_medium=referral&utm_campaign=social-chapter-link Accessed July 27, 2024.
Last Updated: July 17, 2024
Last Reviewed: July 17, 2024
Chapter Information

Patients with spinal cord injury require either multiple repeated bladder catheterizations or long-term catheterization. The majority eventually develop asymptomatic bacteriuria, which may resolve spontaneously and recur and requires no diagnostics or treatment. Symptomatic urinary tract infection (UTI) is very frequent (~2.5 UTI episodes a year per patient). In these patients uropathogens typically form a biofilm on the bladder walls that prevents their eradication; thus, ≥90% of patients continue to have bacteriuria 30 days after discontinuation of treatment. The most frequently isolated pathogens are Proteus spp, Pseudomonas spp, Klebsiella spp, Serratia spp, and Providencia spp. In ~70% of patients more than one pathogen is identified.

Antibacterial treatment is started in patients with clinical signs and symptoms of UTI. Management is as in patients with complicated UTI and catheter-associated UTI.

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