Diagnosis of coliform infection in acutely dysuric women.

We reevaluated conventional criteria for diagnosing coliform infection of the lower urinary tract in symptomatic women by obtaining cultures of the urethra, vagina, midstream urine, and bladder urine. The traditional diagnostic criterion, greater than or equal to 10(5) bacteria per milliliter of midstream urine, identified only 51 per cent of women whose bladder urine contained coliformis. We found the best diagnostic criterion to be greater than or equal to 10(2) bacteria per milliliter (sensitivity, 0.95; specificity, 0.85). Although isolation of less than 10(5) coliforms per milliliter of midstream urine has had a low predictive value of previous studies of asymptomatic women, the predictive value of the criterion of greater than or equal to 10(2) per milliliter was high (0.88) among symptomatic women the prevalence of coliform infection exceeded 50 per cent. In view of these findings, clinicians and microbiologists should alter their approach to the diagnosis and treatment of women with acute symptomatic coliform infection of the lower urinary tract.

[1]  E H KASS,et al.  Bacteriuria and the diagnosis of infections of the urinary tract; with observations on the use of methionine as a urinary antiseptic. , 1957, A.M.A. archives of internal medicine.

[2]  E. Kass Chemotherapeutic and antibiotic drugs in the management of infections of the urinary tract. , 1955, The American journal of medicine.

[3]  J. Steensberg,et al.  Epidemiology of urinary tract diseases in general practice , 1969, British medical journal.

[4]  K. Holmes,et al.  Causes of the acute urethral syndrome in women. , 1980, The New England journal of medicine.

[5]  J. Williams,et al.  PRESENTATION, DIAGNOSIS, AND TREATMENT OF URINARY-TRACT INFECTIONS IN GENERAL PRACTICE. , 1965, Lancet.

[6]  K. Holmes,et al.  Treatment of the acute urethral syndrome. , 1981, The New England journal of medicine.

[7]  P. Taylor,et al.  RELEVANCE OF "SIGNIFICANT BACTERIURIA" TO ÆTIOLOGY AND DIAGNOSIS OF URINARY-TRACT INFECTION , 1975, The Lancet.

[8]  G. Harding,et al.  Anaerobic and aerobic urethral flora in healthy females , 1978, Journal of clinical microbiology.

[9]  F. O'grady,et al.  Introital enterobacteria, urinary infection, and the urethral syndrome. , 1970, Lancet.

[10]  T. Stamey,et al.  The role of vaginal colonization with enterobacteriaceae in recurrent urinary infections. , 1975, The Journal of urology.

[11]  W. Stamm,et al.  Microtest procedure for isolation of Chlamydia trachomatis , 1981, Journal of clinical microbiology.

[12]  K. Holmes,et al.  Antimicrobial prophylaxis of recurrent urinary tract infections: a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. , 1980, Annals of internal medicine.

[13]  D. J. Gallagher,et al.  Acute Infections of the Urinary Tract and the Urethral Syndrome in General Practice , 1965, British medical journal.