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Sending many positive vibes your way @mrsterryn for both you and your husband. 

It would appear that 14 days of Trimethoprim has cleared up wife's UTI.
Run with that @JohnK.on the advice of Urology
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Actually you won't believe me if I told you that I mentioned to Urology that a cystoscope could prove useful and Trimethoprim is the first antibiotic to help wife's UTI so we should have on hand to self medicate if symptoms return. They agreed.Run with that @JohnK.
That's no good.We have further challenges as wife now has high Creatinin and low eGFR
Great- the thing to note is that treatments always involve a 2way discussion in order to get to a workable consensus. Finding your own way without the backup of some expert opinion is fraught with problems. Hence even Drs should never self diagnose or self treat.Actually you won't believe me if I told you
I also think that people like medical personnel and vets have to put up with a lot from people who delay, do the wrong thing etc and then the medical person takes that on board and assists .I want to commend @Quickstatus for his calm and constructive contributions today.
Judge not lest ye also be judged… touche@Quickstatus...
Which line of though sent me here...
“I swear by Apollo the physician, and Asclepius the surgeon, likewise Hygeia and Panacea, and call all the gods and goddesses to witness, that I will observe and keep this underwritten oath, to the utmost of my power and judgment. I will reverence my master who taught me the art.
Hippocratic Oath - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Who are these characters“I swear by Apollo the physician, and Asclepius the surgeon, likewise Hygeia and Panacea,
This is something new. Kidney ultrasound does not show anything out of the ordinary. I've explained what CT + contrast does to my wife. We need to find a different way to diagnose damage to ureter.That's no good.
Is this new or old?
Ordinarily something like this will need a kidney ultrasound or a Ct + contrast. The urologist can only deal with the bit below the kidney - the ureters/bladder. They do deal with kidney issues that are operable - like a tumour but that usually does not cause high creatinine. In your wife's case she needs some way to get images of the ureters if CT+ contrast unavailable. But in any case the high creatinine - see GP in the first instance.
Yes I think that's important but I think the important underlying message is not to just assume it is A because A has occurred many times before and because it must be A, the treatment must be Bbut we need to understand the signals from our bodies.