Abstract

Urinary tract infection is the most common disease in urological practice. The growth of antibiotic resistance in general and in urological practice in particular determines the need to develop methods for determining the risks of the presence of microflora resistance to antimicrobial drugs. The article discusses the existing methods for predicting the resistance of microorganisms to antibiotics, as well as the risk factor for antibiotic resistance developed by the author in community-acquired urinary tract infections. This indicator takes into account the individual characteristics and clinical and laboratory data of the patient with urinary tract infections that occur against the background of urolithiasis.

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