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Clinical Trial
. 1995 Aug;21(2):316-22.
doi: 10.1093/clinids/21.2.316.

Prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria and associated host factors in women with diabetes mellitus. The Manitoba Diabetic Urinary Infection Study Group

Affiliations
Clinical Trial

Prevalence of asymptomatic bacteriuria and associated host factors in women with diabetes mellitus. The Manitoba Diabetic Urinary Infection Study Group

G G Zhanel et al. Clin Infect Dis. 1995 Aug.

Abstract

A prospective study was undertaken to determine the prevalence of significant asymptomatic bacteriuria in adult women with diabetes mellitus attending endocrinology clinics at two tertiary-care university-affiliated teaching hospitals. In addition, host factors of the patients were correlated with bacteriuria. The overall prevalence of bacteriuria was 7.9% (85 cases per 1,072 women). Absolute urinary leukocyte (white blood cell) counts were > or = 10/mm3 in 77.6% (66) of the 85 bacteriuric women vs. 23.7% (234) of the 987 nonbacteriuric women (P < .001). Bacteriuric women were significantly more likely than nonbacteriuric women to have non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, longer duration of diabetes, neuropathy, and heart disease. Aboriginals had bacteriuria at a significantly higher prevalence rate than that among nonaboriginals (19.7% [15 of 76] vs. 7.0% [70 of 996], respectively; P < .0001), were more likely to have occult upper urinary tract infection (antibody-coated bacteria positivity: 53% [8 of 15] vs. 20% [10 of 50], respectively; P = .016), and had significantly lower urinary leukocyte counts, whether they were bacteriuric or not (P < .05). Multivariate analysis identified duration of diabetes and aboriginal origin as independent risk factors for the presence of bacteriuria.

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