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Urinary Tract Infections

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 1977
Urinary tract infections can be found in either sex at any age. While the majority occur in adult females as acute cystitis, recurrent symptomatic bacteriuria, or asymptomatic bacteriuria, adult males with prostatitis or acute pyelonephritis and children with symptomatic urinary tract infections comprise a considerable portion of patients seen ...
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Urinary Tract Infections

Clinical Obstetrics and Gynecology, 1998
Urinary tract infection in women has its origin, predominantly, via ascending bacteria from the periurethral microflora. Asymptomatic bacteriuria, except for the pregnant patient, need not be treated. E. coli is the most common bacterium to cause UTIs, and is usually susceptible to oral antibiotics.
S, Faro, D E, Fenner
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Urinary Tract Infections

Surgical Clinics of North America, 1980
The urinary catheter is a fact of medical life. It is a valuable instrument when used for proper indications and when aseptic management is enforced. When improperly used, it is the major source of serious gram-negative infection in hospitalized patients.
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Infections of the urinary tract

The Pediatric Infectious Disease Journal, 1992
There are many options for the treatment of the child with pyelonephritis. Many children can be successfully treated without hospitalization. Appropriate use of studies to image the urinary tract to detect renal damage and treatable anatomical and functional abnormalities is a key aspect of the management of such patients.
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Urinary Tract Infections

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 2010
Urinary tract infection (UTI) is the most common urologic disorder and one of the most common conditions for which physicians are consulted. Patients at increased risk for UTI include women; diabetics; the immunocompromised; and those with anatomic abnormalities, impaired mobility, incontinence, advanced age, and instrumentation.
Janice A, Litza, John R, Brill
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Urinary tract infections

The American Journal of Medicine, 1992
The populations at risk for urinary tract infection include the newborn, particularly the premature, prepubertal girls, young boys, sexually active young women, elderly males, and elderly females. Risk factors that contribute to lower tract infection in women include sexual intercourse, diaphragm-spermicide use, and voiding behavior. Host factors, more
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Urinary tract infection

Nursing Older People, 2007
Symptoms of urinary tract infections (UTIs) are a common reason for seeking medical advice. UTIs are over-diagnosed and over-treated but there is the potential for them to cause serious complications, such as renal failure, if untreated. The initial diagnosis should be based on clinical assessment rather than urinalysis.
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Urinary Tract Infections

Postgraduate Medicine, 1971
The treatment of urinary tract infections is simplified if they are classified in four groups: uncomplicated acute, complicated acute, asymptomatic and chronic bacteriuria. This makes it easier to decide whether active treatment is indicated, when to start treatment, how long to give it, and which drugs to use.
J F, Wallace, R G, Petersdorf
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Urinary Tract Infections

Primary Care: Clinics in Office Practice, 2013
Clinical presentation helps differentiate between upper and lower urinary tract infections (UTIs). UTIs are classified as either complicated or uncomplicated. A complicated UTI is associated with an underlying condition that increases the risk of failing therapy. Primary laboratory tests for UTIs consist of urinalysis and urine culture. The most common
Alina, Wang   +3 more
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Malakoplakia of the Urinary Tract

British Journal of Urology, 1982
Summary— Five cases of malakoplakia of the urinary tract are described. It is much more common in middle‐aged females (peak incidence in the fifth decade compared with the seventh decade for males) but remains an uncommon condition, although clinically there is a strong association with recurrent urinary tract ...
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