Dysuria

Background

  • Painful or burning urination — one of the most common ED complaints
  • Most commonly caused by UTI (cystitis) in women and urethritis/STI in young men
  • The EM goal is to identify the cause and rule out complications (pyelonephritis, sepsis, urinary retention)

Clinical Features

History

  • Internal dysuria (urethral burning) vs. external dysuria (urine contacting irritated skin — vulvovaginitis)
  • Frequency, urgency, hematuria (cystitis)
  • Flank pain, fever, nausea/vomiting (pyelonephritis)
  • Vaginal/penile discharge (STI, vaginitis)
  • New sexual partner, unprotected sex (STI risk)
  • Urinary retention, hesitancy, poor stream (prostatic obstruction)
  • Recent catheterization or instrumentation

Red Flags

  • Fever + dysuria = pyelonephritis or complicated UTI
  • Suprapubic mass / urinary retention = obstruction
  • Dysuria in men <50 = STI until proven otherwise

Differential Diagnosis

Dysuria

Infectious

  • Cystitis (most common in women)
  • Pyelonephritis (fever, flank pain, CVA tenderness)
  • Urethritis (STI — gonorrhea, chlamydia)
  • Prostatitis (men — perineal pain, tender prostate)
  • Epididymitis (scrotal pain + dysuria)
  • Vulvovaginitis (external dysuria, discharge)
  • HSV (ulcerative lesions, severe dysuria)

Non-Infectious

  • Nephrolithiasis
  • Interstitial cystitis
  • Urethral trauma / foreign body
  • Atrophic vaginitis (postmenopausal)
  • Medication-related (cyclophosphamide → hemorrhagic cystitis)

Evaluation

  • Urinalysis ± urine culture
  • GC/CT NAAT (urine or swab) if STI suspected
  • Wet prep if vaginitis suspected
  • BMP if pyelonephritis or concern for renal impairment
  • Blood cultures if systemic signs of infection
  • Consider imaging (CT or renal US) if complicated UTI, obstruction, or abscess suspected
  • Men <50: STI testing first-line; men >50: UA/culture for cystitis (prostatic obstruction increases UTI risk)

Management

  • Uncomplicated cystitis (women): nitrofurantoin 100 mg BID x 5 days OR TMP-SMX DS BID x 3 days OR fosfomycin 3g single dose
  • Pyelonephritis: see Pyelonephritis — outpatient fluoroquinolone or IV antibiotics if admitting
  • Urethritis (STI): ceftriaxone 500 mg IM + doxycycline 100 mg BID x 7 days (or azithromycin 1g single dose)
  • Prostatitis: fluoroquinolone or TMP-SMX x 4-6 weeks; see Prostatitis
  • Symptomatic relief: phenazopyridine 200 mg TID x 2 days (warn about orange urine)

Disposition

  • Discharge: uncomplicated cystitis, mild urethritis, stable prostatitis
  • Admit: pyelonephritis with sepsis or intractable vomiting, urinary obstruction, prostatic abscess
  • Return precautions: fever, flank pain, inability to urinate, worsening symptoms

See Also

References