Urinary tract infections (UTIs) are among the most frequent infections in adults over 65.
They are often brushed off as routine, but in older adults they can masquerade as something else entirely. That is what makes them tricky, and sometimes dangerous.
When a UTI Looks Like Something Else
Doctors and caregivers know that UTIs in seniors rarely follow the textbook. Instead of the familiar burning sensation or urgency, the infection can show up as:
- Sudden confusion or delirium, often mistaken for dementia progression.
- Excessive sleepiness or fatigue, dismissed as “just aging”.
- Loss of appetite, confused with depression or medication side effects.
- Dizziness and falls, attributed to balance problems or frailty.
- Bed-wetting or incontinence, assumed to be a bladder control issue.
According to Harvard Health, these atypical signs are especially common in postmenopausal women, whose hormonal changes leave urinary tissues more vulnerable. And as UCSF clinicians point out, delirium caused by infection is often mistaken for dementia, a misdiagnosis that can delay treatment until the infection becomes severe.
Why Risk Rises With Age
Several factors make UTIs more common in older adults:
- Weakened immunity with age.
- Chronic conditions like diabetes or kidney disease.
- Catheter use in hospitals or nursing homes.
- Functional disability that limits self-care.
- Exposure to bacteria in long-term care facilities.
According to Cleveland Clinic, urinary tract infections are among the most commonly diagnosed infections in older adults. For women over age 65, the incidence rate is over 10 percent, and it rises to almost 30 percent for women over age 85. Misdiagnosis rates in hospitalized older adults may be as high as 40 percent.
The Treatment Puzzle
Treating UTIs in older adults is not always straightforward. Doctors often need to be careful about which antibiotics they prescribe, because many seniors are already taking medications for diabetes or kidney problems. Some antibiotics can interfere with those medicines or make side effects worse.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) advises using targeted antibiotics such as nitrofurantoin or fosfomycin. These are drugs that specifically attack the bacteria most likely to cause UTIs. On the other hand, the CDC warns against using fluoroquinolones in people with advanced kidney disease.
Fluoroquinolones are a powerful class of antibiotics, but in older adults they can sometimes trigger confusion, known medically as delirium, dangerously low blood sugar, or even problems with blood vessels.
In 2025, the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) published its first set of guidelines for what doctors call “complicated UTIs.” A complicated UTI is one that happens in someone with other health issues, or one that does not respond to standard treatment. According to the IDSA, certain bacteria are now resistant to many of the usual antibiotics. “Resistance” means the bacteria have adapted so the drugs no longer kill them effectively. As a result, doctors often have to turn to stronger medications, which can clear the infection but also carry more side effects.
What Happens If It’s Missed
In many older adults, a UTI may not cause a fever. Without that obvious warning sign, the infection can go unnoticed and untreated for a long time. When bacteria are left to multiply, they can travel from the bladder up into the kidneys. This more serious infection is called pyelonephritis, which simply means a kidney infection.
A kidney infection can cause urine that looks cloudy or smells bad, sharp pain in the back or side, fever with chills, and nausea or vomiting. If the infection continues to spread, it can enter the bloodstream and affect the whole body. This stage is called urosepsis. Sepsis is the body’s extreme reaction to infection, and in this case it starts in the urinary tract.
Urosepsis is a medical emergency. It can cause dangerously low blood pressure, damage to organs, and in severe cases, death. Early signs include confusion, rapid breathing, and swelling in the tissues. That is why recognizing a UTI early, even when it does not look typical, is so important for older adults.
Prevention That Works
While UTIs are common, there are practical steps that can reduce risk:
- Stay hydrated with plain water. Drinking enough fluids helps flush bacteria from the urinary tract.
- Practice good hygiene. Wipe from front to back after using the bathroom, and choose showers instead of long baths to limit exposure to bacteria.
- Urinate regularly. Avoid holding urine in, which allows bacteria to multiply and weakens the bladder over time.
- Consider vaginal estrogen. For postmenopausal women, this can restore tissue health and lower infection risk.
- Explore methenamine. This non-antibiotic option is gaining attention for preventing recurrent infections, according to JAMA Network Open.
The Core Message
UTIs in older adults are common, but their disguises make them easy to miss. Families and caregivers should pay attention to sudden changes in mood, appetite, or cognition, which may be signs of infection rather than aging. With smarter prevention and careful treatment, older adults can avoid the complications that turn a simple infection into a serious health crisis.
References:
1015-Degesys- UTI in the Elderly HREM 2025 Final pdf.pdf
The Truth about UTIs in Older Adults
Outpatient Clinical Care for Adults | Antibiotic Prescribing and Use | CDC
Complicated Urinary Tract Infections (cUTI): Clinical Guidelines for Treatment and Management

















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