Pathophysiology
Clinical meaning
Urine culture is the gold standard for diagnosing urinary tract infections, identifying the causative organism, and determining antibiotic susceptibility. However, the clinical decision-making around when to obtain cultures, how to interpret results, and when NOT to treat positive cultures is a critical NP competency that directly impacts antibiotic stewardship. Specimen collection method significantly affects interpretation thresholds. Clean-catch midstream urine requires proper technique: cleanse the periurethral area, initiate voiding to flush urethral flora, then collect the midstream portion in a sterile container. Contamination is indicated by >5 squamous epithelial cells per high-power field on microscopy, mixed flora (โฅ3 organisms), or low colony counts with multiple organisms. Catheterized specimens (straight catheterization or from newly placed indwelling catheter) are more reliable because they bypass urethral and perineal contamination โ lower colony count thresholds apply. CFU (colony-forming unit) interpretation thresholds vary by specimen type and clinical context. For clean-catch specimens: โฅ100,000 CFU/mL (10^5) of a single uropathogen is the traditional threshold for significant bacteriuria in women with symptoms; โฅ10,000 CFU/mL (10^4) is significant in symptomatic men (lower threshold due to lower contamination risk). For...
