Prostatitis

Background

  • E. coli involved in 80% of cases

Risk Factors

Diagnosis

Acute Prostatitis

  • Clinical diagnosis (UA and Ucx may be normal)
    • Dysuria/urgency/frequency, perineal pain/low back pain, fever
    • Rectal exam: Exquisitely tender and boggy prostate

Chronic Prostatitis

  • Similar to acute prostatitis with exception of fever/chills
  • Rectal exam is often unremarkable

Work-Up

  • UA, Ucx

Differential Diagnosis

Dysuria

Treatment

Antibiotics

Associated with STD

Target organisms are E. coli, and STDs (GC)

No Associated STD and Chronic Bacterial Prostatitis

Aimed at Enterobacteriaceae, enterococci, Pseudomonas

  • Ciprofloxacin 500mg PO q12hrs x 28 days OR
  • Levofloxacin 500mg PO daily x 28 days OR
  • TMP/SMX 1 DS tablet PO q12hrs x 28 days
  • Consider extension to 6 wks of empiric therapy

Septic

Disposition

Source

Rosens, Tintinalli