She felt generally unwell on the trip but chalked it up to travel stress. She was given a transfusion and sent on her way.įlash forward to 6 months later, when Kathy jetted off on a European getaway. Instead, their extensive tests showed that Kathy had extremely low iron. “The doctors discussed (within my hearing) that the strongest antibiotic that could possibly work could also kill me!” The doctors in the emergency room were puzzled and concerned. That was until a few years ago when her UTI stopped responding to two different antibiotic prescriptions.
The symptoms have always been easy to spot and the infections treated with a variety of antibiotics. Kathy - a wife, mother, and silent UTI victim - had to learn that the hard way.Īt the age of 74, Kathy has had her fair share of urinary tract infections. But the longer a UTI goes unnoticed, the more life-threatening it can get. Urinary tract infections are risky to begin with. That’s why those with weaker immune systems, especially the elderly, are more prone to silent UTIs. But what happens when we don’t feel those symptoms? Two words: silent UTI.Ī silent UTI is just like a regular UTI, only without the typical symptoms that prove our immune system is fighting off the infection. After all, they give us a painfully obvious heads up that an infection is coming in hot. The constant need to pee, that burning feeling when you do, and let’s not forget the piercing pelvic pain ( ouch doesn’t even cut it ).Įven though we love to hate these classic UTI symptoms, they deserve a little credit. If you’ve had a urinary tract infection, the symptoms are hard to forget.