TY - CHAP M1 - Book, Section TI - Chapter 56. Urinary Tract Infections A1 - Sheehan, Gerard J. A1 - Mooka, Busi A2 - Hall, Jesse B. A2 - Schmidt, Gregory A. A2 - Wood, Lawrence D.H. PY - 2005 T2 - Principles of Critical Care, 3e AB - All patients with severe urosepsis requiring admission to the intensive care unit should have immediate imaging of the urinary tract preferably by computed tomography with contrast because suppurative complications are common and require drainage as a priority.Percutaneous drainage can be used to drain definitively or stabilize temporarily a patient with suppurative complications.Empiric antimicrobial therapy for acute complicated urosepsis should include two agents with activity against gram-negative bacilli, such as a combination of ciprofloxacin or piperacillin/tazobactam with an aminoglycoside, until the pathogen is isolated and antimicrobial sensitivities are known.Urinary catheters are associated with a high incidence, 1% to 5% per day, of bacteriuria. Patients are also predisposed to candiduria, especially those receiving broad-spectrum antibacterial therapy.Asymptomatic bacteriuria should be treated in all patients before instrumentation of the urinary tract to avoid the development of gram-negative bacteremia.The continued usefulness of a urinary catheter needs to be reassessed on a regular basis, and removal in selected awake stable patients needs to be considered.Treatment of bacteriuria without local signs of infection should be considered only in patients with fever or sepsis after exclusion of other potential causes of infection. SN - PB - The McGraw-Hill Companies CY - New York, NY Y2 - 2022/05/26 UR - accessanesthesiology.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=2291815 ER -