Urinary Tract Infection — Nursing Guide

Lower vs upper UTI, urosepsis, antibiotic management, asymptomatic bacteriuria, CAUTI, and recurrent UTI in GCC context

DHA Ready DOH Ready SCFHS Ready QCHP Ready Urology/Infection 4 MCQs
Overview
Classification
Treatment
Special Populations
MCQ Practice

Definition & Epidemiology

A UTI is infection of any part of the urinary tract (urethra, bladder, ureter, renal pelvis). It is one of the most common bacterial infections, particularly in women (50% experience at least one UTI in their lifetime). Most common pathogen: E. coli (80%).

Common Organisms

OrganismSettingNotes
E. coli — 80%Community-acquiredMost common; ascending from perineum
Klebsiella pneumoniaeCommunity + hospitalMore resistant; common in diabetics
Staphylococcus saprophyticusYoung sexually active womenSecond most common in young women
Proteus mirabilisMale UTI, recurrent UTIUrease-positive → struvite stones
Enterococcus faecalisHospital-acquired / CAUTIRequires broader spectrum antibiotics
Pseudomonas aeruginosaCAUTI, immunocompromisedMulti-drug resistant; difficult to treat

Risk Factors

  • Female sex (short urethra)
  • Sexual activity ("honeymoon cystitis")
  • Urinary catheter (CAUTI)
  • Diabetes mellitus
  • Urinary stasis (BPH, neurogenic bladder)
  • Urinary tract abnormalities (vesicoureteric reflux)
  • Pregnancy
  • Post-menopause (oestrogen loss → flora change)
  • Immunosuppression
  • Renal stones

Classification

TypeLocationSymptomsTreatment
Cystitis (lower UTI)BladderDysuria, frequency, urgency, haematuria, suprapubic discomfort. NO fever typically.3–7 days oral antibiotics; nitrofurantoin or trimethoprim
Pyelonephritis (upper UTI)KidneyLoin/flank pain, fever ≥38°C, rigors, nausea/vomiting; ± lower UTI symptoms7–14 days; ciprofloxacin or co-amoxiclav; IV if severe
UrosepsisSystemicPyelonephritis + sepsis criteria (HR >90, RR >20, altered consciousness, hypotension)URGENT: IV antibiotics within 1 hour + fluid resuscitation (Sepsis 6)
Asymptomatic bacteriuria (ASB)AnyPositive urine culture ≥10⁵ CFU/mL but NO symptomsTreat ONLY in: pregnancy, before urological procedures. NOT routine elderly patients.
CAUTIAny + catheterUTI within 48 hours of catheterisation; catheter in situRemove/change catheter; urine MC&S; targeted antibiotics
Complicated UTIAnyMale, pregnant, immunocompromised, structural abnormality, catheter, recent instrumentationLonger course; broader spectrum; imaging
Asymptomatic bacteriuria in the elderly: Very common (20–50% of institutionalised elderly have positive urine cultures without symptoms). Treating ASB in elderly patients increases antimicrobial resistance and does NOT reduce morbidity. Do NOT culture urine in asymptomatic elderly unless going for urological surgery.

Antibiotic Treatment Guide

ConditionFirst-LineDurationNotes
Uncomplicated cystitis (women)Nitrofurantoin 100mg MR BD (if eGFR ≥45) or Trimethoprim 200mg BD3–7 daysAvoid nitrofurantoin if eGFR <45; GCC resistance patterns — check local guidelines
Uncomplicated cystitis (men)Trimethoprim or ciprofloxacin7 daysExclude prostatitis; urine MC&S always in men
Mild pyelonephritis (oral)Ciprofloxacin 500mg BD or Co-amoxiclav 625mg TDS7–14 daysAdjust based on sensitivities; oral ciprofloxacin has excellent bioavailability
Severe pyelonephritis / urosepsisIV piperacillin-tazobactam (Tazocin) 4.5g TDS or ceftriaxone 2g ODUntil afebrile 24–48h then oral step-down for 14 days totalTake blood cultures before antibiotics; urine MC&S
CAUTIBased on culture sensitivity; empirical = ciprofloxacin or co-amoxiclav7–14 daysRemove/change catheter; if stable, wait for sensitivities
Recurrent UTI (women, ≥2/6 months)Antibiotic prophylaxis (trimethoprim 100mg nocte OR nitrofurantoin 50mg nocte) OR vaginal oestrogen (post-menopausal)3–6 monthsSelf-start therapy option; cranberry juice (weak evidence)

Urosepsis — Sepsis 6 Bundle

Urosepsis = sepsis from urinary source. DELIVER SEPSIS 6 WITHIN 1 HOUR:
  1. High-flow O₂
  2. Blood cultures (before antibiotics)
  3. IV broad-spectrum antibiotics
  4. IV fluid challenge (500 mL crystalloid bolus)
  5. Urinary catheter + strict fluid balance
  6. Serum lactate

Special Populations

UTI in Pregnancy

UTI in GCC Context

MCQ Practice — UTI

Q1. A 28-year-old woman has dysuria, frequency, and suprapubic discomfort but no fever or flank pain. Urine dipstick is positive for nitrites and leukocytes. What is the diagnosis and treatment?

A) Pyelonephritis — 14 days ciprofloxacin
B) Uncomplicated cystitis — 3–7 days nitrofurantoin or trimethoprim
C) Asymptomatic bacteriuria — no treatment needed
D) Urosepsis — IV piperacillin-tazobactam

Q2. An 80-year-old nursing home resident has a urine culture positive for E. coli >10⁵ CFU/mL but is completely asymptomatic. What is the appropriate management?

A) Treat with trimethoprim 7-day course
B) IV antibiotics as elderly are high risk
C) No treatment — asymptomatic bacteriuria in elderly does not require antibiotics
D) Repeat culture in 48 hours; treat if still positive

Q3. A patient with a urethral catheter develops fever 39°C, rigors, and hypotension. Urine is cloudy and offensive. Sepsis 6 is initiated. What specific action regarding the catheter should be taken?

A) Leave catheter in place — removal risks further bacteraemia
B) Irrigate the catheter with antibiotics
C) Remove or change the urinary catheter and send urine from the catheter tip for culture
D) Clamp the catheter to prevent further infection spread

Q4. Which antibiotic for uncomplicated UTI is CONTRAINDICATED at 36+ weeks of pregnancy due to risk of neonatal haemolytic anaemia?

A) Cefalexin
B) Amoxicillin
C) Nitrofurantoin
D) Fosfomycin