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UTIs-Definition. Infectious diseases of the urinary tract: cystitis (bladder) pyelonephritis (kidney) prostatitis (prostate). Etiology. Usually Acute Majority due to a single pathogen Usually an Enterobacteriaceae 90% of all UTI gram negative bacilli common intestinal flora
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UTIs-Definition • Infectious diseases of the urinary tract: • cystitis (bladder) • pyelonephritis (kidney) • prostatitis (prostate)
Etiology • Usually Acute • Majority due to a single pathogen • Usually an Enterobacteriaceae • 90% of all UTI • gram negative bacilli • common intestinal flora • Escherichia coli most commonly isolated pathogen ~80% of all UTI
Gram staining Gram –ve E. coli Gram +ve S. aureus
Organisms: • Gram -ve • Cause 90-95% of UTI’s • most often, E. coli. • Others include: • Proteus mirabilis and Klebsiella. • Gram +ve • pathogens include: • Staph saprophyticus, • Staph aureus, • group A beta hemolytic streptococci and enterococci.
Features of UTI • Common affliction to seek medical attention. • Infancy to old age • Bacturia: • bacteria in urine • does not necessarily imply infection
Features of UTI • Pyuria • Presence of WBCs in urine • Evidence of inflammatory response to infection.
Epidemiology • Populations with increased incidences: • School age girls • Young women>men • >50% have a UTI during their lifetime • >10% per year have a UTI • Pregnant women • Elderly of both sexes • Diabetes • Abnormal urine flow
Children with recurrent infection Monitoring antibiotic therapy High risk individual Who to screen for UTI?
How do we screen for UTIs? • Collect midstream urine • use fresh or refrigerate. • Pour about 10 ml in tube and dipstick. • Microscopy • Culture
Chemical Analysis • Dip-stick testing • Quick • Efficient • Inexpensive • Large number of substances
Urinalysis • Dipstick findings: • leukocyte esterase + with pyuria • nitrite + with Enterobacteriaceae • alkaline pH with urea splitting bacteria, e.g., Proteus mirabilis • high specific gravity if patient is volume depleted • protein often + • blood may be +
What are the most useful test? • Leukocyte Esterase • Enzyme found WBCs • More reliable than microscopic analysis for WBCs • Positive results indicate inflammation in the path taken by urine. • Includes urethra, prostate, cervix and vagina • Occur in 90 to 95% of symptomatic UTI • Less sensitive asymptomatic UTI in elderly and pregnancy • Significant result: positive
What are the most useful test? • Nitrite • Some bacteria will convert Nitrate to Nitrite • Good indicator of contact of urine with bacteria • Detects 2/3 to ¾ of all UTIs • But… • Gram +ve bacteria do not cause a positive result • Negative results do not rule out infection • Significant Result: Positive
Urinalysis • Centrifuge for 5 min at 2000 rpm, pour off supernatant; examine sediment with microscope using high power objective. • Microscopic findings: • <5 leukocytes per high power field (hpf) • more = pyuria • 1 bacterium per hpf correlates with >100,000 per ml; • 1 bacterium = 1 colony forming unit (cfu) • hematuria
Urine Culture • Quantitative: uncentrifuged urine inoculated on an agar plate to do a colony count. • Appropriate agars: 5% sheep blood and eosin-methylene blue or MacConkey. • Incubate: at 35-37o C for 24 hours.
Urine Culture • Significant bacteriuria: • by 24 hour colony count • cystitis: >100 cfu per ml • pyelonephritis: >100,000 cfu/ml • Species identification. • Susceptibility testing • urine for C&S.
Urinary Bacteria Detection Kits • Two Uses • Patients susceptible to UTI • Monitor effectiveness of Treatment • Detect urinary nitrites associated with gram-negative bacterial infections.
How the Test Works: Nitrites Gram -ve Pathogen Nitrite Nitrate in Acidic Urine Meat, Fish & Eggs P-Arsanilic Acid Diazonium Compound Pink Color N-(1-naphthyl) -ethylenediamine
How the Test Works: Leukocytes White Blood Cells in Urinary Tract White Blood Cells in Urine INFECTION/INFLAMMATORY RESPONSE Pyrrole Ester Compound Leukocyte esterase Color Diazo Reagent Pyrrole
Sampling precautions • Clean Dry Container • First Morning Urine or in Bladder >4 hrs • Fresh sample • Follow-up: Regardless of result. • Test Sensitivity • 90% - 3 consecutive mornings • 10% - False negative rate
Factors Affecting Test • Concentration of Gram -ve Bacteria • > 100,000/mL of urine • Time in the Bladder • Contamination • Blood • Adequate Dietary Nitrates • Most people Consume sufficient Quantities • Drug interference • Alkaline Urine • Ascorbic Acid (Vitamin C)>250 mg • Antibiotics and Drugs that turn urine red
Home Cholesterol Tests • Two Uses • Monitor progress on Lipid lowering drugs and diet • Save Time and Costs of Physician Visits • Err on the side of false positives • Multiple measurements should be evaluated • Measurement errors and day to day biological and behavioral changes contribute to variations in cholesterol levels
How the Test Works Few Drops of Blood 10 Filter Step 1 Plasma (Cholesterol & Cholesterol esters) Step 2a 1. Wick Flow of Plasma 2. Cholesterol Oxidase/Esterase 3.2 Step 2b Colored Dye Cholest-4-ene-3-one H2O2 Peroxidase
Factors Affecting Test • Finger Pricking Technique • Hanging Drops • Squeezing and Milking • Time to Collect • Low results if > 5 min. • Blood Volume
?Usefulness • Test only measures Total Cholesterol • Laboratories measure LDL, HDL, triglyceride, and cholesterol. • All are required. • You cannot make a judgement on cardiovascular risk on Cholesterol alone. • If values >5.2 : Discuss with physician • If values<5.2: Check Cholesterol again at next visit with a physician
Other kits • Drugs of Abuse • Cannabinoids • Cocaine • Amphetamines • Benzodiazepines • Barbiturates • Opiates • Combinations • Home tests for STDs • Home tests for monitoring DM complications
This new product measures cholesterol plus other things using a test strip • Predict in as greatest detail you can how it might works… • What factors do you think could affect the reliability of the test results?