Urinary tract
disorders are another “layer of the onion” that might need to be peeled away to
make you better. Of my FMS patients, 25% have chronic UTIs or interstitial
cystitis. Individuals with fibromyalgia and CFS often have problems with their
urinary system. They may experience chronic urinary tract infections (UTIs),
interstitial cystitis, incontinence (involuntary loss of urine), and urinary
retention (inability to pass urine).
Urinary Tract Infections
UTIs are more common
in women who are sexually active, people with diabetes, and people with sickle-cell
disease or anatomical malformations of the urinary tract. Also, women are more
prone to UTIs than males, since a women’s urethra is much shorter and closer to
the anus than a man’s. This is why proper hygiene is so important in females.
UTI can be especially dangerous for infants and can cause permanent renal
damage.
Symptoms and signs
include painful, hesitant, frequent urination and high temperature lasting for
more than three days. Nausea and vomiting along with pain and temperature may
indicate a more complicated UTI, in which a kidney is infected.
Some urinary tract
infections are asymptomatic. Others may have quite dramatic symptoms including
confusion and associated falls, which are common for elderly patients with UTI
who show up at the emergency room.
Diagnosis
The diagnosis of UTI
is confirmed by a urine culture. A negative urine culture suggests the presence
of other illness, such as chlamydia or gonorrhea.
Causes
Common organisms that
cause UTIs include E. coli and S. saprophyticus. Less common organisms include P.
mirabilis, K. pneumoniae, and
Enterococcus
spp.
Over 90% of UTIs are
caused by E. coli.
This bacteria is normally found in everyone’s gut and, with the exception of a
few rare dangerous forms, it is a healthy part of our normal bowel bacteria.
The problems begins when E. coli escapes the bowel and enters the
bladder. The bladder is able to remove most infections through the process of
urination, but E. coli
are quite resilient and able to use projections to help them stick to the
bladder wall.
Prevention of UTIs
• Drink 70 ounces
of water a day.
• Avoid excess
alcohol and caffeinated beverages.
• Don’t resist
the urge to urinate; visit the bathroom as soon as you feel compelled.
• If you have
frequent UTIs, avoid taking baths; take showers instead.
• Practice good
hygiene by wiping from the front to the back to avoid contamination of the
urinary tract.
• Sexually active
women—and to a lesser extent, men—should urinate within 15 minutes after sexual
intercourse to allow the flow of urine to expel the bacteria before specialized
extensions anchor the bacteria to the walls of the urethra.
• Clean the
urethral meatus (the opening of the urethra) after intercourse.
• Clean genital areas
prior to and after sexual intercourse.
Conventional Medical Treatment
Most uncomplicated
UTIs can be easily treated with oral antibiotics such as trimethoprim,
cephalosporins, Macrodantin, or a fluoroquinolone (such as ciprofloxacin or
levofloxacin).
Symptoms consistent
with pyelonephritis, a serious kidney infection, may call for intravenous
antibiotics.
Patients with
recurrent UTIs may need further investigation such as ultrasound scans of the
kidneys and bladder or intravenous urography (X-rays of the urinary system
following injection of contrast material).
Often, long courses
of low-dose antibiotics are prescribed to help prevent otherwise unexplained cases
of recurring UTI.
Natural Treatment
Taking antibiotics
will usually kill the bacteria that is causing a bladder infection, but will
also kill the healthy “good bacteria” in your body. Always combat this side
effect of antibiotics by taking probiotics along with them, 12 hours apart from
each other.
Another option, which
I prefer, is to try natural remedies before resorting to antibiotic therapy. If
the symptoms don’t clear up within a couple days, then you can always start
antibiotic therapy then. Natural therapies can also be used while you’re
waiting for your tests results to confirm a UTI.
• Cranberry
juice can end a UTI. In
addition to acidifying urine, cranberries contain substances that inhibit
bacteria from attaching to the bladder lining and, as such, promote the
flushing out of bacteria with the urine stream. Dosage is one to two cups of
pure cranberry juice (no sugar added) or 2–4 cranberry capsules (standardized
to 11%–12% quinic acid) a day for 1–2 weeks. This may well be all you need to
eliminate a UTI.
• D-mannose
is a naturally occurring
sugar similar in structure to glucose but metabolized differently. (Because the
body metabolizes only small amounts of D-mannose and excretes the rest in the
urine, it doesn’t interfere with blood-sugar regulation, even in diabetics.)
Though D-mannose doesn’t kill bacteria, it prevents bacteria from attaching to
the bladder wall. D-mannose is safe, even for long-term use, although most
people will only need it for a few days. Those who have frequent recurrent
bladder infections may choose to take it on a daily basis. I’ve found it to be
the best option for stubborn, chronic UTIs.
I had about several of those when I was five-years-old and had to have Major bladder surgery, which the surgery saved my life and did not had to have another repeat of it again, although I was also one of the smallest child to ever have it done and now at 25-years-old, and very blessed to be alive today.
ReplyDeleteThanks, @Rimi from ADULT DIAPERS