| Literature DB >> 27104571 |
Abstract
Asymptomatic bacteriuria, also called asymptomatic urinary infection, is a common finding in healthy women, and in women and men with abnormalities of the genitourinary tract. The characterization and introduction of the quantitative urine culture in the 1950s first allowed the reliable recognition of asymptomatic bacteriuria. The observations that a substantial proportion of patients with chronic pyelonephritis at autopsy had no history of symptomatic urinary infection, and the high frequency of pyelonephritis observed in pregnant women with untreated asymptomatic bacteriuria, supported a conclusion that asymptomatic bacteriuria was harmful. Subsequent screening and long term follow-up programs for asymptomatic bacteriuria in schoolgirls and women reported an increased frequency of symptomatic urinary tract infection for subjects with asymptomatic bacteriuria, but no increased morbidity from renal failure or hypertension, or increased mortality. Treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria did not decrease the frequency of symptomatic infection. Prospective, randomized, comparative trials enrolling premenopausal women, children, elderly populations, patients with long term catheters, and diabetic patients consistently report no benefits with antimicrobial treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria, and some evidence of harm. Several studies have also reported that antimicrobial treatment of asymptomatic bacteriuria increases the short term risk of pyelonephritis. Current investigations are exploring the potential therapeutic intervention of establishing asymptomatic bacteriuria with an avirulent Escherichia coli strain to prevent symptomatic urinary tract infection for selected patients.Entities:
Keywords: asymptomatic bacteriuria; asymptomatic urinary tract infection; bacterial interference; bacteriuria
Year: 2016 PMID: 27104571 PMCID: PMC4931389 DOI: 10.3390/pathogens5020038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pathogens ISSN: 2076-0817
Prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria reported in different populations.
| Proportion with Bacteriuria | ||
|---|---|---|
| Healthy, pre-menopausal women | 1.0%–5.0% | |
| Pregnant women | 1.9%–9.5% | |
| Postmenopausal women (50–70 years) | 2.8%–8.6% | |
| Diabetic: | Women | 9%–27% |
| Men | 0.7%–11% | |
| Elderly in community: | Women | 10.8%–16% |
| Men | 3.6%–19% | |
| Elderly in long term care: | Women | 25%–50% |
| Men | 15%–40% | |
| Spinal cord injury | 50% | |
| Chronic indwelling catheter | 100% | |
IDSA Recommendations for asymptomatic bacteriuria in adults [1].
| pregnant women (AI) |
| transurethral resection of the prostate (AI) |
| other traumatic urologic procedures (AIII) |
| premenopausal, non-pregnant women (AI) |
| diabetic women (AI) |
| older persons living in the community (AII) |
| elderly institutionalized residents (AI) |
| persons with spinal cord injury (AII) |
| catheterized patients (AI) |