Last week, my mother was diagnosed with a urinary tract/kidney infection (blood in
urineCalcium - urine
Calcium urine test
Chloride - urine
Cortisol - urine
Electrolytes - urine
Glucose test - urine
Hcg in urine
Ketones - urine
Kidney - blood and urine flow
Lh urine test (home test)
Ph urine test, low-grade
feverAllergic rhinitis
Coccidioidomycosis
Febrile seizures
Fever
Fever blister
Fever blisters and canker sores
Herpes labialis (oral herpes simplex)
Histoplasmosis
Malaria
Rheumatic fever
Scarlet fever (not over 100), positive
urinalysisUrinalysis, sent for culture and we were told it returned positive for E. Coli).
Macrobid prescribed. Today, her
temperatureTemperature measurement (which had been
normalNormal saline flush since the day of diagnosis) has suddenly increased to a high of 103, but it has varied throughout the day from 99.6 to 103 and now down to 100.
The doctor was called and changed her medication to Cipro 500mg bid; he told her that there were three different bacteria in the culture and is sending her for a CT scan to check for stones.
My biggest immediate concern is that my mom has only one kidney; the other kidney was removed due to cancer over 40 years ago.
My questions are as follows, especially given that the first medication appears not to have worked:
1. Is the likely situation that what started out as a UTI is now a kidney infection?
2. As she has only one kidney, what kind of concern is there that a kidney infection could cause substantial harm to the kidney? Is there something we should be doing that we are not doing?
3. Should we be concerned about any blood infection/sepsis as the initial medication didn't seem to work?
4. Is it likely that the three types of bacteria in the culture are actually all part of the infection or are two of them contaminants? (It's my understanding that the urine she provided for the urostix/dipstick urinalysis was then transferred into a tube and sent off for culture).
Thank you.