Bladder Bother: Debunking common misconceptions about UTIs

Are UTI's a sign of poor hygiene? Why are women more prone to them? Is cranberry juice really a cure? 

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Are UTI's a sign of poor hygiene? Why are women more prone to them? Is cranberry juice really a cure? 

Urinary tract infections can make some people, particularly women, feel needlessly ashamed. “For years, women were told that UTIs were related to their cleanliness, but they’re not,” says Dr Barbara W. Trautner, physician at Houston’s Michael E. DeBakey VA Medical Center and professor of medicine at Baylor College of Medicine. 

It is true that women get UTIs up to 30 times more often than men, but it’s a matter of anatomy, not hygiene. For anyone, a UTI develops when bacteria in the bladder—usually introduced via the urethra—cause inflammation or other symptoms somewhere along the urinary tract. Since the urethra in women is shorter than it is in men, the bacteria have less distance to travel to reach the bladder. As well, in women’s bodies, the urethra opening is closer to the anus, where E. coli—a common cause of UTIs—reside. Other factors make certain women more prone to the condition: sexual activity, pregnancy and birth control with spermicides, for example.

Another misconception about UTIs is that they cause delirium in seniors. Trautner says the evidence around that isn’t conclusive. A fever related to a UTI could be a contributing factor causing confusion, but it’s more likely to be a symptom of an underlying brain disease, taking multiple medications, malnutrition, untreated pain or organ failure. Muddling matters, Trautner adds, is the fact that bacteria are often present in the urine of older adults without causing harm—a condition known as asymptomatic bacteriuria, which normally requires no treatment.

UTIs do become more common with age, however. In women, oestrogen levels drop after menopause and the vagina loses protective bacteria that keep harmful bacteria out. In men, the prostate begins to enlarge after age 50, trapping urine in the bladder. Also, all older adults are more likely to acquire risk factors such as kidney stones, catheter...

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