Treatment Overview
Antibiotics can treat most
urinary tract infections (UTIs) successfully. The
goals of treatment for UTIs are to relieve symptoms, eliminate the infection
and prevent recurrence, and prevent unlikely but serious complications such as
kidney damage and
sepsis. In pregnant women, treatment protects the
woman and the fetus.
Initial treatment
Treatment for
uncomplicated bladder infections in women usually is 3
days of
antibiotics. Home treatment includes drinking a lot of
water and fluids and urinating frequently, emptying your bladder each time.
Additional testing is not necessary if your symptoms improve.
Oral antibiotics usually can treat kidney infections (pyelonephritis), although you may need brief
hospitalization and a short course of
intravenous (IV) antibiotics if you are too ill or
nauseated to take medicine by mouth (oral medication). Kidney infections tend
to make people more severely ill than bladder infections. After you are feeling
better, you may take oral antibiotics, typically for about 2 weeks. Your doctor
probably will test your urine for bacteria after treatment, to be certain you
no longer have an infection.
Your antibiotic treatment may take longer and you may require
further testing before and after treatment if you:
- Are pregnant.
- Are older than
65.
- Have diabetes or an
impaired immune system.
- Are a man.
UTIs in men typically require 1 to 2 weeks of antibiotics. Additional testing
and treatment for prostate problems (such as
prostatitis) or sexually transmitted diseases (such as
chlamydia or
gonorrhea) may be necessary.
If you have a severe kidney infection, or if a bladder or kidney
infection is
complicated by other factors, you may need
hospitalization.
Treatment if the condition gets worse or recurs
If your
urinary tract infection (UTI) does not improve after
treatment with
antibiotics, you will need further evaluation and
additional antibiotic treatment.
If the infection spreads and affects your kidney function or
causes widespread infection (sepsis), you will need hospital care.
These complications are not common, and they rarely occur in people who are
otherwise healthy. People are at higher risk if they have an
impaired immune system,
diabetes, untreated urinary tract obstruction, and/or
other conditions that affect the kidneys or bladder.
A new infection, rather than a relapse of the same infection,
usually is the cause of a UTI that keeps coming back (recurs).
- Women with recurrent bladder infections may take antibiotics
for 6 months, followed by
preventive antibiotic therapy.1
- Recurrent UTIs in men are usually a sign of
prostate infection (prostatitis). Chronic prostatitis can
be difficult to treat and may take up to 6 weeks of antibiotic therapy. For
more information, see the topic
Prostatitis. Follow-up checkups are usually necessary
in men who have UTIs and are always necessary if the infection recurs.
What To Think About
Your doctor may base treatment decisions for a bladder infection
on your symptoms and urinalysis results, without doing a urine culture. If
treatment clears up the symptoms, it confirms the diagnosis of a simple,
uncomplicated UTI. If the symptoms do not clear up,
you will need further testing to look for:
- A kidney infection.
- Structural
problems with the kidneys that increase the risk of
infection.
- Infection with an uncommon bacteria.
- An
impaired immune system.
- A cause for the symptoms that is not an
infection.
If
group
B streptococcal infection causes a UTI in a pregnant woman, she will
receive antibiotic treatment during labor so that she does not pass the
infection to her baby.2
Many forms of bacteria have become resistant to common
antibiotics designed to destroy them. These are called
antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Antibiotic resistance
among bacteria that cause UTIs has increased steadily in recent decades.
You and your doctor may have to try different antibiotics, and
different combinations of antibiotics, to find the right medication that will
kill the bacteria causing the UTI. But in most cases, a urine culture and
antibiotic sensitivity test will help find the right antibiotic to use.