Here’s why pain might last after persistent urinary tract infections
The immune response spurs nerve growth in mice, possibly explaining the unending pain
Urinary tract infections are painful, inconvenient and incredibly common. For decades, doctors haven’t had any leads on why, even after several rounds of antibiotics, UTI pain can linger. Now they do.
Nerve growth from immune responses to the infection might be to blame, researchers report March 1 in Science Immunology. Understanding immune and nerve responses to persistent UTIs, the team says, could possibly lead to new, antibiotic-free forms of treatment.
Over half of women will have a UTI in their life, and around a quarter of infections come back within six months. The pain from these infections can be quite difficult to treat, says Marcus Drake, a neurological urologist at Imperial College London. “It’s a ‘heartsink situation’ for the patients, and it’s a heartsink situation for the doctors, because there isn’t much that you can do.”