This website uses cookies to allow us to understand our visitors and provide the best experience and information. If you prefer, you can turn off cookies in your browser.
Access to this website is also based on acceptance of our Terms of Use. |
Chronic UTI Australia is Australia’s only national patient advocacy organisation dedicated to urinary tract infection (UTI).
Chronic UTI Australia is completely run by volunteers and is funded entirely through donations. There is no industry or government funding supporting our work.
If you have found the information on our website helpful, you can help others by making a donation. With your support, we can continue our advocacy work and reach even more people searching for answers.
Donating through PayPal is a safe and easy way to give. There are no fees and once PayPal has notified us of your donation, we will send you a tax-deductible receipt.
To make a donation through a direct bank transfer, please use your name as a reference and email contact@chronicutiaustralia.org.au with details of your donation so we can send you a tax-deductible receipt.
Our bank details are:
BSB: 033-157
Account: 698815
If you have a business and would like to discuss partnering with Chronic UTI Australia, you can download our 2024 sponsorship packages here or contact us by email to discuss how you would like to sponsor contact@chronicutiaustralia.org.au
All Australian donations over $2 are tax-deductible (ABN 63 529 067 635).
If you would like to help out or become involved in other ways, we are always looking out for people with skills, resources or contacts who can further our advocacy work. If you think you have something to offer, please contact us to discuss your ideas.
If you are interested in being involved with our committee, please contact us for more information.
If you would like to become proactive in your own way, throughout the year we will be sharing information on suggested organisations to contact and write to, along with other helpful and proactive approaches you can take. Please keep checking back here for updates.
Table of Contents
×A young adult writes of her experiences as a child:
“I developed a chronic UTI as a result of recurrent childhood urinary infections which were repeatedly misdiagnosed and left untreated, resulting in severe bladder and kidney symptoms which left me with a diagnosis of interstitial cystitis. I am now 22 years old and this condition has stripped me of my entire childhood.
“I started to develop symptoms of severe urinary frequency and urgency when I was 6 years old. When my parents initially took me to see my GP, a urine dipstick was carried out and showed no signs of infection. A subsequent culture showed insignificant bacterial growth, resulting in no further treatment. When my symptoms subsequently worsened over the next 3 months, further negative dipsticks and cultures were carried out and I was misdiagnosed with overactive bladder syndrome. By this time, my urinary frequency had progressed to the point where I was urinating every 10 minutes and could not be away from a toilet for any length of time. My parents and school teachers were advised to encourage me to train my bladder to hold more urine by withholding access to a toilet, which resulted in such severe pain and embarrassment that I became terrified of going to school and missed a significant amount of my primary school education.
“Coincidentally, recurrent ear infections throughout my childhood meant that I was prescribed numerous short courses of antibiotics, which somewhat helped to reduce my bladder symptoms. However, my symptoms would recur quickly after the antibiotic course was finished. Despite this clear correlation in symptoms, any suggestion of an infection was dismissed repeatedly by my GP.
“I battled through my teenage years with fluctuating bladder symptoms that often left me leaving the classroom several times during school lessons and avoiding school trips and social interaction for fear of suffering bladder symptoms. When I was 17, I suddenly developed a severe worsening of symptoms, resulting in immense burning during urination, severe urgency, severe bladder pain and a sensation that I had a boiling hot marble stuck in my urethra. I saw my GP, who diagnosed me with a UTI based on my symptoms and prescribed me with a week-long course of antibiotics. However, despite a slight improvement in my symptoms during this time, the symptoms continued to linger. When my GP subsequently sent my urine off for culture, it revealed mixed growth of doubtful significance, and I was diagnosed with “post-UTI irritation” and placed on oxybutynin. This pattern of events continued to repeat over the next 3 months, with numerous short 3-day courses of antibiotics, oxybutynin, Vesicare and amitriptyline being prescribed in an attempt to relieve my pain.
“Over the course of the next 2 years, my symptoms continued to worsen. I saw my GP hundreds of times and was referred to a total of two urogynaecologists and two urologists, all of whom either diagnosed me with overactive bladder or interstitial cystitis, and one of who claimed that my symptoms were psychological in nature and that my brain was simply “wired differently” to everyone else. I underwent two urodynamic studies, three KUB ultrasounds and two rigid cystoscopies under anaesthetic, the second of which I also underwent a ureteroscopy, retrograde study, urethral dilation, ureter dilation and bladder distension following a misdiagnosis of kidney stones after a poor-quality CT scan. Unfortunately, these investigations caused a massive deterioration in my symptoms and I was hospitalised on multiple occasions with severe uncontrollable pain and vomiting, kidney infections, urinary retention and passing frank blood clots that were so thick that I was unable to pass urine. Each time I was admitted to hospital and given IV antibiotics, my symptoms would improve dramatically, only to relapse as soon as the course had finished.
“By the time I self-referred to ***** private clinic in 2015, I was near suicidal with pain. My symptoms included severe, debilitating pain in my urethra, bladder, kidneys and vagina, urine retention that frequently left me unable to pass urine for 24 hours at a time, significant voiding issues and incredible urgency which felt as though my bladder was tying itself in knots. I frequently passed thick blood clots, and the immense urethral burning that plagued me with this condition felt as though someone had filled my urethra with petrol and set it on fire. I often awoke at night screaming with pain because the pain of leaking urine in my sleep was so terrifying that I often thought I was being attacked.
“[The clinic] diagnosed me with a chronic UTI via microscopy on a fresh, unspun urine sample and immediately placed me on an extended course of antibiotics. Although my progress has been slow as a result of so many years of inadequate treatment resulting in a deeply embedded infection, I have finally reached the stage where my symptoms are under control and I do not require the care of urologists or my GP with regards to my bladder symptoms. I am now able to live a relatively normal life with minimal bladder symptoms, and I have returned to work and university. However, as a result of the extensive strain that my untreated chronic UTI has placed on my autonomic nervous system over the past 16 years, I have been diagnosed with postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome, inappropriate sinus tachycardia and gastrointestinal motility problems, thought to be due to gastroparesis, which are likely to be ongoing issues throughout my life.
“My greatest regret is that so many opportunities were missed to treat my symptoms when I was a child. Had I been given early access to treatment, my lifelong suffering could have been entirely preventable. I can only hope that in the future, children like myself will not be confined to the suffering and trauma that I have experienced.” [i]
[i] Malone-Lee, J., Cystitis Unmasked, 2021, pp241-244, tfm Publishing Limited, Castle Hill Barns, Harley, Shrewsbury, UK https://www.tfmpublishing.com/cystitis-unmasked