Nickel J Curtis
Department of Urology, Queen's University, Kingston General Hospital, Kingston, Ontario, Canada K7L 2V7.
J Urol. 2005 Jan;173(1):21-6. doi: 10.1097/01.ju.0000141496.59533.b2.
Urinary tract infections (UTIs) have plagued mankind long before bacteria were recognized as the causative agents of disease and before urology became an established medical specialty. To our knowledge a comprehensive review of the recorded medical history of UTI from its first description in ancient Egyptian papyri through today has not been attempted until now.
Numerous resources were used to collect the information described in this review. Older textbooks from the school of medicine library at our institution were used to collect information on UTI in ancient times. Medical texts from the 19th century contains information regarding the treatment of UTI during that era. Early volumes of the Journal of Urology from the beginning of the 20th century are rich with information on the first attempts at chemotherapy for UTI. MEDLINE searches were used to collect appropriate information after 1969.
The Ebers papyrus from ancient Egypt recommended herbal treatments to ameliorate urinary symptoms without providing insight into pathological mechanisms. Hippocrates believed that disease was caused by disharmony of the 4 humors and accordingly diagnosed urinary disorders. Roman medicine further expanded the conservative approach (bed rest, diet, narcotics and herbs) advocated by Greek physicians, while also improving invasive techniques (surgical lithotomy for stones and catheterization for retention). The Arabian physician Aetius refined uroscopy and created a detailed classification and interpretation of urinary disease based on this technique. During the Middle Ages no major advances occurred, although existing therapies were refined and treatments for gonococcal urethritis were well described. The early 19th century provided vivid and detailed descriptions of UTIs without the knowledge that they were caused by microorganisms. Management included hospitalization, bed rest, attention to diet, plasters, narcotics, herbal enemas and douches, judicious bleeding (direct bleeding, cupping and leeches), and surgery for stones, abscess and retention. The discovery of microorganisms as the etiological agents of infectious diseases in general and inflammation associated with urinary diseases in particular provided an impetus for physicians critically to examine management approaches and develop evidence based strategies for UTI treatment. Various antibacterial agents, such as hexamine, mercurochrome and others (hexylresorcinol, methylene blue, pyridium, acriflavin and mandelic acid), showed promise in laboratory studies but their efficacy in clinical investigations was disappointing.
Treatments for UTI until the discovery of antibiotics were largely palliative because the bacterial origin of UTI was not recognized and no specific antimicrobial therapies were available.
早在细菌被确认为疾病的致病因子以及泌尿外科学成为一门既定的医学专科之前,尿路感染(UTIs)就一直困扰着人类。据我们所知,此前从未有人尝试对从古代埃及纸莎草纸首次描述UTI至今的UTI病史记录进行全面回顾。
我们使用了大量资源来收集本综述中描述的信息。利用我们机构医学院图书馆的旧教科书来收集古代UTI的信息。19世纪的医学文献包含了那个时代UTI治疗的相关信息。20世纪初的《泌尿学杂志》早期卷册中富含关于UTI首次化疗尝试的信息。1969年之后利用医学文献数据库(MEDLINE)检索来收集相关信息。
古埃及的埃伯斯纸莎草纸推荐了草药疗法来缓解泌尿系统症状,但未深入探讨病理机制。希波克拉底认为疾病是由四种体液失衡引起的,并据此诊断泌尿系统疾病。罗马医学进一步扩展了希腊医生所倡导的保守疗法(卧床休息、饮食、麻醉药和草药),同时还改进了侵入性技术(用于治疗结石的手术取石术和用于治疗尿潴留的导尿术)。阿拉伯医生埃提乌斯改进了尿液检查,并基于此技术对泌尿系统疾病进行了详细的分类和解读。中世纪虽然现有疗法得到了改进,并且对淋菌性尿道炎的治疗有了详细描述,但没有取得重大进展。19世纪早期对UTIs进行了生动而详细的描述,但当时并不知晓它们是由微生物引起的。治疗方法包括住院、卧床休息、注意饮食、使用膏药、麻醉药、草药灌肠和冲洗、谨慎放血(直接放血、拔火罐和使用水蛭)以及针对结石、脓肿和尿潴留的手术。微生物作为一般传染病尤其是与泌尿系统疾病相关炎症的病原体的发现,促使医生批判性地审视治疗方法,并制定基于证据的UTI治疗策略。各种抗菌剂,如乌洛托品、红汞和其他药物(己基间苯二酚、亚甲蓝、吡咯烷酮、吖啶黄素和扁桃酸),在实验室研究中显示出前景,但它们在临床研究中的疗效却令人失望。
在抗生素发现之前,UTI的治疗大多是姑息性的,因为UTI的细菌起源未被认识,也没有可用的特异性抗菌疗法。