Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1922877592> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W1922877592 endingPage "649" @default.
- W1922877592 startingPage "644" @default.
- W1922877592 abstract "Emerging evidence challenges the long-held paradigm that the healthy bladder is sterile. These discoveries may provide new opportunities to address important women's health conditions, which include preterm labor and delivery, urinary tract infections, and common forms of urinary incontinence. Traditional tools for urinary bacterial assessment, which includes urinary dipsticks and standard urine cultures, have significant limitations that restrict the information that is available to clinicians. For example, the standard urine culture does not detect slow-growing bacteria that die in the presence of oxygen. Two new, complementary tools, however, can detect these and other organisms, which permits a more complete characterization of bacterial communities within the female bladder. Obstetrician-gynecologists should become familiar with these new approaches (expanded quantitative urine culture and 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing) that can detect previously unrecognized organisms. These advances are making it possible to answer previously intractable scientific and clinical questions. Traditional nomenclature used to describe the bacterial status in the bladder is quite dated and unsuited for the emerging information about the bacterial milieu of the female urinary tract. In the context of the sterile bladder paradigm, clinicians have learned about uropathogens, asymptomatic bacteriuria, and urinary tract infection. Given that the lower urinary tract is not sterile, these terms should be reevaluated. Clinicians can already benefit from the emerging knowledge regarding urinary organisms that have previously gone undetected or unappreciated. For example, in some subpopulations of women with urinary symptoms, existing data suggest that the urinary bacterial community may be associated with women's health conditions of interest. This Clinical Opinion highlights the inadequacies of the current tools for urinary bacterial assessment, describes the new assessment tools, explains the current interpretation of the resulting data, and proposes potential clinical uses and relevance. A new world is opening to our view that will give us the opportunity to better understand urinary bacteria and the bladder in which they live. This new knowledge has significant potential to improve patient care in obstetrics and gynecology." @default.
- W1922877592 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1922877592 creator A5006559972 @default.
- W1922877592 creator A5044844791 @default.
- W1922877592 date "2015-11-01" @default.
- W1922877592 modified "2023-10-07" @default.
- W1922877592 title "The new world of the urinary microbiota in women" @default.
- W1922877592 cites W1967961996 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W1972126171 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W1986904100 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W1991936883 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2030030445 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2049807959 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2056493181 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2056582109 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2059994013 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2073321050 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2079222081 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2091546524 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2096278211 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2110235509 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2118526609 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2119828786 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2122921940 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2130728368 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2131415145 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2133306969 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2159527861 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2167415413 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2170181743 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2171663607 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2323054812 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2328023807 @default.
- W1922877592 cites W2395873015 @default.
- W1922877592 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajog.2015.05.032" @default.
- W1922877592 hasPubMedCentralId "https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/4876712" @default.
- W1922877592 hasPubMedId "https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26003055" @default.
- W1922877592 hasPublicationYear "2015" @default.
- W1922877592 type Work @default.
- W1922877592 sameAs 1922877592 @default.
- W1922877592 citedByCount "85" @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922015 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922016 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922017 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922018 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922019 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922020 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922021 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922022 @default.
- W1922877592 countsByYear W19228775922023 @default.
- W1922877592 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1922877592 hasAuthorship W1922877592A5006559972 @default.
- W1922877592 hasAuthorship W1922877592A5044844791 @default.
- W1922877592 hasBestOaLocation W19228775922 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C10885799 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C126322002 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C151730666 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C177713679 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C2776216170 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C2779234561 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C2780026642 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C42407357 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C54355233 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C71924100 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C77411442 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConcept C86803240 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C10885799 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C126322002 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C151730666 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C177713679 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C2776216170 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C2779234561 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C2779343474 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C2780026642 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C42407357 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C54355233 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C71924100 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C77411442 @default.
- W1922877592 hasConceptScore W1922877592C86803240 @default.
- W1922877592 hasIssue "5" @default.
- W1922877592 hasLocation W19228775921 @default.
- W1922877592 hasLocation W19228775922 @default.
- W1922877592 hasLocation W19228775923 @default.
- W1922877592 hasLocation W19228775924 @default.
- W1922877592 hasOpenAccess W1922877592 @default.
- W1922877592 hasPrimaryLocation W19228775921 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W1940510386 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W1967909850 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W2048296902 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W2084322807 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W2350906831 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W2363320567 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W2400658481 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W2741672778 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W3146679522 @default.
- W1922877592 hasRelatedWork W1965011781 @default.
- W1922877592 hasVolume "213" @default.