A Place for Mom
Assisted Living
Memory Care
Independent Living
Senior Living
Sign in

UTIs in the Elderly: Symptoms and Treatment

5 minute readLast updated August 27, 2021
Written by Angelike Gaunt

Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are the most common type of bacterial infection in older adults. According to the National Institutes of Health, UTIs affect around 10% of men and 20% of women older than 80. Seniors may also experience different and more severe symptoms than younger adults do, including agitation, mental confusion, and sudden changes in behavior.

Let our care assessment guide you

Our free tool provides options, advice, and next steps based on your unique situation.

Take our free care quiz

When left untreated, UTIs in the elderly can cause serious problems, including permanent kidney damage and sepsis — a generalized and potentially life-threatening infection.

Read on to understand how UTIs can affect the elderly and how to recognize symptoms of this common infection.  

What are the symptoms of UTIs in the elderly?

Like anyone with a UTI, older adults may experience typical physical symptoms. Yet they may not notice a mild infection right away. This is because chronic urinary problems common in seniors, such as urinary incontinence or frequency, may have similar symptoms to a UTI, masking an infection.

Common symptoms of a UTI include:

  • Burning, painful sensation with urination
  • Frequent, intense urge to urinate even when there’s little urine to pass
  • A feeling that the bladder is not completely emptied
  • Blood in the urine
  • Cloudy or foul-smelling urine

Symptoms of a more severe UTI may include:

  • Fever
  • Night sweats or chills
  • Nausea and vomiting
  • Pain in the lower abdomen or back

When accompanied by other common UTI symptoms, these changes in behavior can also be key signs of a UTI in elderly adults:

  • Confusion or delirium
  • Sudden urinary incontinence
  • Inability to perform common daily tasks, such as getting dressed or feeding themselves

Why do UTIs cause confusion in the elderly?

The immune system of an older adult reacts differently to infection compared to younger people.

“A bladder infection places stress on the body,” says Dr. Mary Ann Forciea, an associate clinical professor at the University of Pennsylvania Health System in Philadelphia.

Let our care assessment guide you

Our free tool provides options, advice, and next steps based on your unique situation.

That stress can result in confusion and abrupt changes in behavior in older adults with a UTI. And for seniors with Alzheimer’s disease or other types of dementia, “any kind of stress, physical or emotional, will often make dementia temporarily worse,” Forciea says.

Why are seniors at risk for UTIs?

Men and women older than 65 are at greater risk for UTIs. This is because both men and women tend to have more problems emptying their bladder completely as they age, causing bacteria to develop in the urinary system.

In older men, this often happens because of a common condition called benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), or an enlarged prostate gland. The enlarged prostate blocks the flow of urine and prevents the bladder from fully emptying.

As women age, the bladder muscles weaken and prevent the bladder from emptying completely, increasing the risk of infection. Women also produce lower amounts of estrogen after menopause. This creates an imbalance of good and bad bacteria in the vagina, which can lead to infection.

Other risk factors for UTIs in older adults include:

  • Using a catheter to empty the bladder
  • Having kidney stones, which can block the flow of urine
  • Having a suppressed immune system, which lowers the body’s defense against infection

How is a UTI diagnosed?

In older adults who have symptoms of a UTI, a simple urine test — called a urinalysis — can confirm infection. In some cases, the doctor requests a urine culture to identify the type of bacteria causing the infection and help determine the best antibiotic to treat it.

However, it’s important to know that older adults often have bacteria in the urine that don’t cause any symptoms. This condition is called asymptomatic bacteriuria, and it often resolves on its own without treatment.

Doctors now recommend against doing a urine test to check for a UTI, unless patients have typical, bothersome UTI symptoms. This is to avoid the excessive use of antibiotics to treat infection, which can lead to antibiotic resistance.

How are UTIs treated in older adults?

Antibiotics are the first choice of treatment for UTIs. Mild UTIs often clear up in only a few days with the right antibiotic.

However, depending on the person’s age and health plus the severity of the infection, treatment for a UTI may take several weeks and a longer course of antibiotics. In more severe cases, older adults may need to be hospitalized to receive IV antibiotics.

If your loved one has symptoms of a UTI, it’s important to make an appointment with their doctor right away. If symptoms are severe, call the doctor immediately to determine whether a trip to the emergency room is necessary.

Talk with a Senior Living Advisor

Our advisors help 300,000 families each year find the right senior care for their loved ones.

How to Prevent UTIs in Seniors

Older adults can help prevent UTIs by drinking plenty of fluids to flush the bacteria from their systems, Forciea says. She recommends older adults drink four to six 8-ounce glasses of water a day. Forciea further notes that drinking cranberry juice or taking cranberry tablets also can make urine less inviting for bacteria.

Use these strategies to help prevent UTIs in elderly women:

  • Urinating promptly after the urge arises
  • Wiping front to back
  • Emptying the bladder shortly after sex
  • Taking showers instead of baths

If your loved one has frequent UTIs or other challenges that require help with daily tasks, consider talking to one of our Senior Living Advisors about home care or senior living options that can improve their quality of life.

Sources:

UpToDate. “Approach to infection in the older adult.”

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. “Urinary tract infection.”

National Institute on Aging. “Bladder health for older adults.”

American Family Physician.“Common infections in older adults.”

SHARE THE ARTICLE

Meet the Author
Angelike Gaunt

Angelike Gaunt is the Director of Editorial Content Strategy at A Place for Mom. She’s developed health content for consumers and medical professionals at major health care organizations, including Mayo Clinic, the American Academy of Family Physicians, and the University of Kansas Health System. She’s passionate about developing accessible content to simplify complex health topics.

The information contained on this page is for informational purposes only and is not intended to constitute medical, legal or financial advice or create a professional relationship between A Place for Mom and the reader. Always seek the advice of your health care provider, attorney or financial advisor with respect to any particular matter, and do not act or refrain from acting on the basis of anything you have read on this site. Links to third-party websites are only for the convenience of the reader; A Place for Mom does not endorse the contents of the third-party sites.

Make the best senior care decision