Abstract

Urinary tract infection remains a common and important bacterial infection among adults. Symptomatic urinary infection occurring in nonpregnant women with a normal genitourinary tract is considered to be acute uncomplicated urinary tract infection (1). This syndrome occurs most frequently in young women, but older women, particularly in the early postmenopausal period, also experience acute uncomplicated infection. Complicated urinary tract infection occurs in women or men of all ages with functional or structural abnormalities of the urinary tract. The heterogeneity of clinical presentations of urinary tract infection requires different management strategies for different populations.

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