Clinical and Laboratory Characteristics of Urosepsis: A Ten Case Series
10.14442/general.14.104
- Author:
Tomoyuki Koura
;
Keiichiro Kita
;
Namie Kawabuchi
;
Fumiko Watanabe
;
Hiroko Nakagaito
;
Taro Miura
;
Maiko Kuroiwa
;
Kiichiro Yoshida
;
Seiji Yamashiro
- Publication Type:Journal Article
- Keywords:
urosepsis;
urinalysis;
liver dysfunction;
urinary tract obstruction
- From:General Medicine
2013;14(2):104-107
- CountryJapan
- Language:English
-
Abstract:
Background: Urosepsis is a potentially fatal syndrome that is sometimes difficult to diagnose. Thus, the aim of the present study was to clarify the clinical and laboratory characteristics and pitfalls in the diagnosis of urosepsis.
Methods: We enrolled the study participants based on clinical records of patients with urosepsis treated between January 2009 and April 2012 inclusive, in the Department of General Internal Medicine, Toyama University Hospital and retrospectively surveyed underlying diseases, clinical symptoms, physical findings, and laboratory data, respectively.
Results: Ten definitive patients were selected (nine females and one male; age, 55–86 years). Fever was the most frequent symptom followed by nausea. Lower back pain was the chief complaint in only two patients. One patient complained of dysuria, and on examination half of the patients lacked costovertebral angle (CVA) tenderness. Five patients showed elevated liver enzymes without evidence of hyperbilirubinemia.
Conclusions: There were no specific clinical characteristics of urosepsis, and symptoms in some patients resembled digestive diseases such as cholangitis. Our results demonstrate that use of dipstick urinalysis and microscopic urinalysis are essential for the diagnosis in patients with sepsis. Abdominal ultrasonography and/or computed tomography should also be considered to rule out false negative results of urinalysis related to urinary tract obstruction, and to detect other focal infections when appropriate.