12 Symptoms Of Uti Men You Should Know

Vomiting or Nausea

Vomiting is an automatic response that causes the stomach’s contents to leave the body through the mouth. Nausea is a feeling of wanting to vomit but not actually doing so. Vomiting and nausea are very common symptoms that various causes may bring on. 

A UTI  located in the ureters or has migrated to the kidneys is referred to be an upper tract infection. A kidney infection, also known as pyelonephritis, can develop when bacteria have migrated from the bladder to the kidney up the urinary tract or when blood-borne germs have accumulated in the kidney. Pain in the upper back or side, a high temperature, chills and trembling, nausea, or vomiting are all signs of an upper tract UTI or kidney infection. Vomiting, nausea, fever and chills point to a more serious and advanced infection than a regular UTI.

A lower tract infection is far less dangerous than one that affects the upper tract (the kidneys, the bladder, or the urethra). Other illnesses, such as STIs, can also cause similar signs and symptoms to a UTI. Knowing how a typical UTI feels and when it might be more serious is crucial because each condition has a specific treatment.