When you urinate, the warning sensation has every opportunity to include infections, food, medical medications, or basic dissatisfaction with medical drugs.
The feeling is usually accompanied by other signs that help qualify the cause (and cure).
Burning elementary is very uncommon,” says Elizabeth Male, artist, urologist, urologist at the Lenox Hill Outpatient Clinic in New York City and author of The Universe of Passages. ‘It’s usually accompanied by other baggage.’
For example, urine may be cloudy or noticeable in color, odor, or frequency.
Here are some reasons why this may hurt it or burn when you pee.
Urinary tract infection
The most common problem that determines when patients talk about a burning sensation while urinating is a urinary tract infection,” says Anthony Schaefer, a urologist at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago.
This is even more so if you notice symptoms at certain moments and you are a woman. In fact, more than 50% of women will have a urinary tract infection or UTI at some point in their lives.
If you have a UTI, the burning sensation is usually accompanied by a feeling of having to go up every day, sometimes accompanied by cloudy urine.
Ninety percent of UTIs are caused by the bacterium Escherichia coli (E. coli), which can be treated with antibiotics.
Irritation and Sensitivity
If you are peef you can have a warm sensation but no infection. Anything that strains the urinary tract (including the kidneys, urethra, urine leaders, and ureters) can cause these feelings.
‘If the skin is wet or irritated, or if the urine is sour, it can burn ,” says Dr. Kavaler.
The list of culprits is long. Sour ambrosia such as citrus fruits, drinks with alcohol or caffeine, hot tubs, soap, lumps, contraceptive foam or ingredients such as lips.
The best conclusion is to identify and promote the perpetrators.
Urine and Kidney Stones
Usually formed from calcium, these stones can become very large and block parts of the urinary tract. This blocks the flow of urine so much that you actually have to puff and burn when you pee.
In contrast to UTIs, they are more common in men.
Frequent urinary tract infections can result in too little water, obesity, water cost due to frequent drinking of stones as well as frequent diarrhea resulting from diseases such as Crohn’s disease.
Other signs are urgent peeing, black or bloody urine, nausea and vomiting, cramps in the back and sides, inability to pee large amounts of urine.
An ovarian cyst that presses on the urethra butus has every opportunity to affect the way you pee. Rest assured: most cysts are benign and go away on their own, but you should consult your doctor (ovarian cancer is relatively rare, but don’t overlook the symptoms).
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Vaginismus.
Thirty percent of women will develop vaginitis or vaginal inflammation during their lifetime.
It is caused by something that replaces the natural flora (resident bacteria and other organisms) of the area. It is a chemical preparation from fungal infections, intercourse, drug use, hormonal fluctuations during pregnancy or menopause, showers or seed killers.
Sexually Transmitted Diseases
Almost all sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) are sexually transmitted diseases. burns In particular, goiters, herpes, chlamydia, and syphilis.
Sexually transmitted diseases have every opportunity to lead to emotional and combustion pains,” says Dr. Schaffer. “If someone is sexually active, they follow an evaluation trail.”
Along with UTIs, this is one of the two main reasons women pee with pain.
If you suspect you have an STD, it is fundamentally important that your doctor examine you so he or she can come up with a treatment.
Pelvic
According to Cavalier’s doctor’s text, this is a muscular attitude that has nothing in common with an infection.
The pelvic floor is the collection of muscles that support the urethra, uterus, prostate, and other organs in the pelvic region. It may be associated with interstitial cystitis (IC) or bladder pain, but we do not know exactly what is causing the IC.
In addition to annoying pain when urinating, you can also feel the need to go to the bathroom frequently and urgently.
Prostate.
In men, the urethra runs and urine leaves the body through the prostate. Prostatitis (inflammation) can prevent urination.
Often it is an infection that causes inflammation, or in older men it can be associated with benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH), usually called an enlargement of the prostate.
You may still need to pee often (at least 8 times every 24 hours) and you may need to pee at night, which can be a problem if you have an enlarged prostate.
Medications.
Certain substances can cause painful urination, e.g., chemotherapy or cancer radiation. Urinary tract and pelvic surgery can also make a personal contribution.
The more common chemotherapies for bladder injury are cyclophosphamide (process) and ifosfamide (IFEX). They still have a good chance of increasing your risk of UTI.
If you have cancer-curing side effects, the State Cancer College recommends drinking copious amounts of water and continuing to talk with your oncologist about techniques to prevent symptoms.
When to Go to the Doctor
For some people, painful peeing automatically disappears, while others triumph with routine measures such as drinking cranberry juice (for UTIs) and avoiding hot tubs. Often the pain is so excruciating that they go to the doctor.
If symptoms persist and you are suffering from bloody urine, changes in the color or scent of urine, fever or back pain, and aside from that go to the doctor. Also seek help if you are pregnant or immune.
Says Dr. Mann, “The doctor collects all the information and looks at treatment.” & lt; pran & gt; The more common chemotherapies for bladder injury are cyclophosphamide (process) and ifosfamide (IFEX). They are still likely to increase the risk of UTI.
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