| Literature DB >> 29317791 |
Dilraj S Kalsi1, Joel Ward1, Regent Lee1, Ashok Handa1.
Abstract
Purple urine bag syndrome (PUBS) is a complication of urinary tract infections (UTIs) where catheter bags and tubing turn purple. It is alarming for patients, families, and clinicians; however, it is in itself a benign phenomenon. PUBS is the result of UTIs with specific bacteria that produce sulphatases and phosphatases which lead tryptophan metabolism to produce indigo (blue) and indirubin (red) pigments, a mixture of which becomes purple. Risk factors include female gender, immobility, constipation, chronic catheterisation, and renal disease. Management involves reassurance, antibiotics, and regular changing of catheters, although there are debates regarding how aggressively to treat and no official guidelines. Prognosis is good, but PUBS is associated with high morbidity and mortality due to the backgrounds of patients. Here, we review the literature available on PUBS, present a summary of case studies from the last five years, and propose the Oxford Urine Chart as a tool to aid such diagnoses.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29317791 PMCID: PMC5727662 DOI: 10.1155/2017/9131872
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dis Markers ISSN: 0278-0240 Impact factor: 3.434
A summary of case reports of PUBS in the last 5 years.
| Case | Key details |
|---|---|
| Su et al. [ | 81-year-old woman; PC = fever, discoloured urine; RFs = bedridden, chronic catheterisation; Ix = urine with |
| Al Montasir and Al Mustaque [ | 86-year-old female; PC = abdominal pain; PMH = osteoporosis, fractured hip, neurogenic bladder; RFs = bedridden, chronic catheterisation, constipation; Ix = alkaline urine with |
| Agapakis et al. [ | 83-year-old female; PC = haematuria, fever; PMH = hypothyroidism, Alzheimer's, colon cancer; RFs = bedridden, chronic catheterisation; Ix = misdiagnosed as haematuria, alkaline urine with |
| Duff [ | 57-year-old female; PC = diffuse abdominal pain; PMH = transverse myelitis, recurrent UTIs, 2 C-sections; RFs = chronic catheterisation, colostomy bag; Ix = alkaline urine with |
| Bhattarai et al. [ | 87-year-old female; PC = altered mental status; PMH = dementia, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, recurrent UTIs, left nephrostomy tube, right ureteral stent, end-stage renal disease; RFs = bedridden, kidney disease, constipated; Ix alkaline urine with Enterococci/ |
| Mohamad and Chong [ | 78-year-old female; PC = fever, vomiting; PMH = hyperlipidaemia, hypertension, dementia; RFs = bedridden, chronic catherisation; Ix = urine dip unremarkable, blood cultured |
| Yaqub et al. [ | 83-year-old female; PC = nausea, vomiting, reduced oral intake, constipation, purple urine; PMH = dementia; RFs = bedridden, chronic catheterisation, recurrent UTIs; Ix = alkaline urine with |
| Bocrie et al. [ | 87-year-old female; PC = postfall syndrome, urinary retention, faecaloma; RFs = catheter; Ix = asymptomatic bacteriuria ( |
| Keenan and Thomas [ | 97-year-old man; PC = purple urine, constipation; PMH = prostate hyperplasia, urinary retention; RFs = chronic catheterisation; Ix = urine with |
| Siu and Watanabe [ | 48-year-old man; PC = ischaemic encephalopathy after cardiac arrest; PMH = type 2 diabetes, coronary artery disease/bypass; RFs = recurrent UTIs, chronic catheterisation; Ix = alkaline urine with |
Figure 1The aetiology of purple urine bag syndrome [5].
Risk factors for purple urine bag syndrome [4].
| Risk factor | Mechanism |
|---|---|
| Female gender | Anatomy predisposed to UTIs |
| Increased dietary tryptophan | Increased substrate for conversion |
| Increased urine alkalinity | Facilitates indoxyl oxidation |
| Severe constipation | Increased time and substrate for bacteria |
| Chronic catheterisation | Increased UTI risk |
| High urinary bacterial load | Bacterial sulphatase/phosphatase availability |
| Renal failure | Impaired indoxyl sulphate clearance |
Figure 2Oxford Urine Chart.