you may have a urinary tract/bladder infection if it burns or stings upon urination, have urine urgency but only produce little urine and pain there is prescription medicine available for the pain and antibiotics for the infection
You should go and see your doctor about this as soon as you can.
inflammation
urine, sweat, stool , mucus and earwax
Some mucus in the stool is normal. Conditions like irritable bowel syndrome and ulcerative colitis can cause more mucus in the stool.
The appearance of mucus in urine can be an indicator of any number of issues. Some of more serious issues include urinary tract infections, kidney stones, sexually transmitted diseases, urachal cancer, ulcerative colitis, and irritable bowel syndrome.
it means that you should see a doctor
Answer: Passage of mucus in stool can suggest colitis, infection or a villus adenoma / polyp. You need to see your Doctor to check this out
A small amount of mucus in the stool is normal. A doctor should be consulted it it becomes a regular occurrence or if it is accompanied by blood in the stool. This may be an indication of more serious conditions including Crohn's Disease, ulcerative colitis or cancer.
If you are worried take the child to a doctor with a sample of the stool. Everyone has mucus in their stool to some extent. The bowel is lined with mucous membrane which helps the passage of the stool. Sometimes it becomes excessive if there is an inflammation, or the bowel is irritated (for example by spicy food). If the child is healthy and apart from this the stools are normal and the mucus is not bloodstained, forget about it.
They don't. The urine is in their stool.
Stool and Urine
Go to the doctor.
If you mean like high amount of urine: Polyuria. If you mean like high amount of particles inside the urine: High specific gravity = your urine may have high levels of glucose, protein, bilirubin, urobilinogen, or/and a lot of mucus, crystals, bacteria, and tissue/blood cells.
The stool, urates and urine