3 gallons
3 gallons may be true for a cow, but it appears that the volume in a healthy bladder is about 2 cups. With age and stretching ("oversized") it can hold 4 cups or more. (One gallon is 16 cups!)
Typically yes because males tend to be larger than females and bladder size is relative to body size. It is not a general rule though considering some men are rather small. Men do tend to have stretchier bladders however.
Acutely outstretched bladders go to normal size almost immediately after you void the urine. In chronic obstruction the bladder may get thicker also. This will be reversed to original size, once the stricture of urethra is corrected, although it may take longer time.
The two bladders in the body are the urinary bladder, which stores urine until it is expelled from the body, and the gallbladder, which stores and concentrates bile produced by the liver until it is needed for digestion.
Mammals, including humans, have bladders located within their lower abdomen. The bladder is a muscular organ that stores urine produced by the kidneys until it is released from the body through the urethra.
Sargassum air bladders provide buoyancy to the seaweed, allowing it to float on the ocean surface. This helps the sargassum access sunlight for photosynthesis and allows it to drift with ocean currents.
bladders bladders
No they do not have bladders only humans do.
yes they have 2 urinary bladders
no they have exactly the same size bladders as everybody else. (Mr.Ben.Dover health specialist)
Typically yes because males tend to be larger than females and bladder size is relative to body size. It is not a general rule though considering some men are rather small. Men do tend to have stretchier bladders however.
They don't have bladders in them
The air bladders in the pine family with air bladders help with pollen wind dispersal. The pine family with air bladders has the bladders to help the pollen being blown into the female cones of the conifer.
Yes snakes have bladders, nearly all animals have bladders to extract their wasteful body fluids.
Acutely outstretched bladders go to normal size almost immediately after you void the urine. In chronic obstruction the bladder may get thicker also. This will be reversed to original size, once the stricture of urethra is corrected, although it may take longer time.
Battle of Bladders - 1903 was released on: USA: January 1903
Yes they do.
Yes.