Can a cold cause a urinary tract infection?

Colds do not usually cause urinary tract infections because they are mostly caused by viral infections, while urinary tract infections are mostly caused by bacterial infections. Of course, when you have a cold, your body’s resistance is at a low level and your ability to fight off foreign bacteria is reduced. So, when you have a cold the resistance is lowered and can lead to an infection, but it is not the direct cause. Sometimes cold can lead to urinary tract infection, such as inflammation of internal medicine, when the cold occurs, the virus invasion can lead to the occurrence of pediatric acute nephritis, which is also a special kind of urinary tract infection, but of course it does not belong to the traditional sense of urinary tract infection, belongs to the inflammation of the immune system of nephrology, and does not require the use of antibiotics, but rather to use immunosuppressants to counteract immunity. Therefore, the common cold does not usually lead to urinary tract infections.