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Nosocomial urinary tract infections: A review. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • * High-risk groups include patients with indwelling catheters, those undergoing urological procedures, elderly males, and patients with serious health conditions, all of whom may require varying lengths of treatment based on the infection's location and severity.
  • * To minimize the risk of NUTIs, practices like proper hand hygiene, wearing gloves, isolating infected patients, and managing asymptomatic cases through catheter adjustments rather than antibiotics are recommended, although antibiotic resistance remains a growing concern.

Article Abstract

Nosocomial urinary tract infections are a common complication in healthcare systems worldwide. A review of the literature was performed in June 2014 using the Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online (MEDLINE) database, through either PubMed or Ovid as a search engine, to identify publications regarding nosocomial urinary tract infections (NUTIs) definition, epidemiology, etiology and treatment.According to current definitions, more than 30% of nosocomial infections are urinary tract infections (UTIs). A UTI is defined 'nosocomial' (NUTI) when it is acquired in any healthcare institution or, more generally, when it is related to patient management. The origin of nosocomial bacteria is endogenous (the patient's flora) in two thirds of the cases. Patients with indwelling urinary catheters, those undergoing urological surgery and manipulations, long-stay elderly male patients and patients with debilitating diseases are at high risk of developing NUTIs. All bacterial NUTIs should be treated, whether the patient is harboring a urinary catheter or not. The length of treatment depends on the infection site. There is abundance of important guidance which should be considered to reduce the risk of NUTIs (hand disinfection with instant hand sanitizer, wearing non-sterile gloves permanently, isolation of infected or colonized catheterized patients). Patients with asymptomatic bacteriuria can generally be treated initially with catheter removal or catheter exchange, and do not necessarily need antimicrobial therapy. Symptomatic patients should receive antibiotic therapy. Resistance of urinary pathogens to common antibiotics is currently a topic of concern.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.5301/uro.5000092DOI Listing

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