Urine waiting
Introduction
Introduction Urinary waiting symptoms are more common in prostate diseases, and then with the accumulation of urine pressure is higher, and finally discharged through the urethra, and suffering from prostatitis leads to a decrease in the ability of the posterior urethra to store urine, that is, urine is sensitive to the urethra. Sexual enhancement, so the pressure drops, after the pressure drops, it will lead to reduced pressure on the posterior urethra, pressure reduction, the strength of urination will decline, so there is a waiting for urine.
Cause
Cause
Psychological factors:
Psychological tension or panic can cause urine to wait.
Inflammation of the prostate:
Inflammation of the prostate, urinary waiting is mainly due to excessive contraction of the sphincter, insufficient or not timely relaxation, and inconsistent with the bladder detrusor.
Examine
an examination
Related inspection
Bladder ultrasound examination of bladder palpation
The patient's urination pattern is monitored and the abdomen is often palpated to determine the extent of bladder inflation. Local heat can be applied to the perineum or abdomen to relax muscle stimulation and urinate. At the same time, teach patients how to catheterize themselves. It allows it to interrupt the catheter by itself. Prepare cystoscopy and bladder and urethra X-ray for patients.
Diagnosis
Differential diagnosis
Ask the patient when they first discovered this symptom and have had this problem before. Ask the patient if there are other urination problems. In particular, there is no urinary flow or interruption of urine flow. Identify patients with a history of prostate, urinary tract infection, or urethral obstruction. Defining the history of the drug. Check the patient's urethra for inflammation, secretions or other abnormalities. Check the anus and the perineal sensation. Collect clean urine specimens for urine routine, urine culture, and drug susceptibility testing. Male patients should palpate the prostate, and female patients should undergo a gynaecological examination.
The material in this site is intended to be of general informational use and is not intended to constitute medical advice, probable diagnosis, or recommended treatments.