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Correspondence
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Volume 330:792 March 17, 1994 Number 11
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Management of Urinary Tract Infections

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 by Stamm, W. E.
To the Editor: In their excellent review of the management of urinary tract infections in adults (Oct. 28 issue),1 Stamm and Hooton comment that pyuria is "usually" present in patients with cystitis. Our experience is that pyuria is always present in adults with symptomatic bacterial cystitis. Is it not incorrect to diagnose a bacterial urinary tract infection in the absence of concomitant pyuria (generally defined as more than 10 neutrophils per high-power field of centrifuged urinary sediment)?


Donald F. Middendorf, M.D.
Lee A. Hebert, M.D.
Ohio State University
Columbus, OH 43210-1228

References

  1. Stamm WE, Hooton TM. Management of urinary tract infections in adults. N Engl J Med 1993;329:1328-1334. [Free Full Text]

 
To the Editor: Stamm and Hooton list trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole as . . . [Full Text of this Article]

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