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This condition leads to urine incontinence and is common after child birth. It will improve with pelvic exercises. You could take medication if it does not after a few months.
An overactive bladder is a medical condition that leads to strong, unexpected or frequent urges to urinate and is also associated with the inability to control urination. A general guideline for an overactive bladder is the need to urinate more than 8 times in 24 hours, or experiencing extreme and sudden urgency to urinate. An overactive bladder can be caused by a variety of factors such as high fluid intake, poor kidney function, urinary tract infections, certain medications, caffeine intake, alcohol intake, or other underlying medical conditions such as an enlarged prostate, tumor, or neurological condition. Because there is a range of conditions that can cause an overactive bladder, it is important to discuss the condition with your doctor of you are experiencing symptoms. There are a variety of treatments for an overactive bladder including bladder training, medications, and surgery, though the correct method of treatment will depend on the underlying problem causing the condition. Your doctor will ask you questions and take a medical history as an initial step in determining treatment. You may be asked to record your fluid intake and to specify how much alcohol or caffeine you ingest. Simple tests can determine whether or an infection or other underlying problem is the cause. Depending on the outcome of these tests, you will be given specific treatment recommendations. Sometimes, a simple retraining of the bladder combined with exercises that increase the strength of the pelvic floor muscles are sufficient to overcome the problem. If not, there are many medications that act to relax the bladder, and their side-effects are often minor. In some instances, electrical stimulation of the nerve responsible for sending signals to the bladder has been an effective treatment. Surgery can also be employed as a treatment solution, but is often used as a last resort. Surgeries of this nature typically focus on increasing the size of your bladder to increase storage capacity. There are many treatments for an overactive bladder available today, but it is most important to address the problem by speaking to a health care professional who can address the underlying cause and lead you to the proper treatment.
You may have overactive bladder take detrol and try to do Kegel exercise to relax perineal muscles so that you can hold urine. Frequent urination at night suggest BPH.
Diet-wise, there's some things you can do to prevent an overactive bladder. First off - put down the sodas. Caffeine (coffee lovers with an overactive bladder should also take note) and carbonation can worsen the issue, and even be the cause of it developing. Alcohol, as well, has a similar effect, as it retains water and leads the body into urinating more frequently. Beer is the biggest culprit. Water based foods are also of concern - avoid excessive consumption of tomatoes, grapes, melons, and mangoes. If you crave fruits, drying them seems to help.
From the time it go's into your mouth, about 3 hours.
Depends on how tall the person is HUH?
You will cannot control your bladder
can you use penicilina v for bladder infection
No.
They carry the urine to the bladder. The urethra takes urine from the bladder to the outside.
The bladder is a hollow organ with little blood supply. It would usually take hours to loose even some blood if this organ was punctured; however, it would depend on the mechanism of injury and damage to surrounding tissues/organs.
This depends upon the trajectory of death, and whether or not the bowels and bladder had any contents. But when a person dies such muscles are released immediately, so would bowel and bladder content.