The Hamilton Spectator

Drink water to fight those urinary tract infections

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Drinking more water will help women avoid urinary tract infections (UTIs), according to generation­s of women and now a study in JAMA. Women who added 1.5 litres of water each day to their regular intake of fluids were less likely to get another UTI, than women who drank less than that amount.

“It’s estimated 50 per cent of UTIs can be treated by drinking a significan­t amount of fluid alone,” says Felecia Fick, a Mayo Clinic urogynecol­ogy physician assistant who was not involved in the study. “The extra you’re drinking is flushing out the bacteria that are present in the urinary tract.” She adds any type of fluid is fine, but sometimes the more acidic, the better. “There are mixed studies on the benefits of cranberry juice, but Mayo Clinic does recommend trying cranberry juice, cranberry extract or cranberry pills, as well as water,” says Fick.

A UTI is an infection in any part of your urinary system — your kidneys, ureters, bladder, and urethra. Most infections involve the lower urinary tract — the bladder and urethra. Women are at greater risk of developing a UTI than men due to their shorter urethras.

“If a woman has fever, chills, flank pain, kidney stone history, she should also drink a lot of fluid but it is imperative she see a health-care provider immediatel­y for a urine culture,” says Fick, adding there could be a kidney infection, which is much more serious than an uncomplica­ted UTI.

UTIs don’t always cause signs and symptoms, but, when they do, they may include:

• A strong, persistent urge to urinate;

• A burning sensation when urinating;

• Passing frequent, small amounts of urine;

• Urine that appears cloudy and is strongsmel­ling;

• Urine that appears red, bright pink or cola-coloured — a sign of blood in the urine;

• Pelvic pain, in women — especially in the centre of the pelvis and around the area of the pubic bone.

Prevention

• Drink plenty of liquids, especially water and cranberry juice.

Drinking water helps dilute your urine and ensures that you’ll urinate more frequently — allowing bacteria to be flushed from your urinary tract.

• Wipe from front to back.

Doing so after urinating and after a bowel movement helps prevent bacteria in the anal region from spreading to the vagina and urethra.

• Empty your bladder soon after intercours­e.

Also, drink a full glass of water to help flush bacteria.

• Avoid potentiall­y irritating feminine products.

Using deodorant sprays or other feminine products, such as douches and powders, in the genital area can irritate the urethra.

• Change your birth control method. Diaphragms, or unlubricat­ed or spermicide-treated condoms, can all contribute to bacterial growth.

Complicati­ons

When treated promptly and properly, lower UTIs rarely lead to complicati­ons. But left untreated, a UTI can have serious consequenc­es.

• Recurrent infections, especially in women who experience three or more UTIs in a six-month period or four or more within a year;

• Permanent kidney damage from an acute or chronic kidney infection (pyelonephr­itis) due to an untreated UTI;

• Increased risk in pregnant women of delivering low birth weight or premature infants;

• Urethral narrowing (stricture) in men from recurrent urethritis, previously seen with gonococcal urethritis.

• Sepsis, a potentiall­y life-threatenin­g complicati­on of an infection, especially if the infection works its way up your urinary tract to your kidneys.

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