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- Urination - Wikipedia
The process of urination is under voluntary control in healthy humans and other animals, but may occur as a reflex in infants, some elderly individuals, and those with neurological injury
- Frequent Urination: Causes, What It Means How To Stop
Frequent urination is the need to pee more than usual throughout the day and night UTIs are the most common cause
- Urine and Urination - MedlinePlus
Your kidneys make urine by filtering wastes and extra water from your blood The waste is called urea Your blood carries it to the kidneys From the kidneys, urine travels down two thin tubes called ureters to the bladder The bladder stores urine until you are ready to urinate
- Are You Peeing Too Often? Heres What Urologists Say Is Normal
Peeing “just in case” too often can train your bladder to hold less and make you urinate more frequently Most healthy people urinate five or six times a day Holding your urine is uncomfortable but generally not harmful, and evidence that it causes UTIs is limited
- Frequent Urination: Causes, Diagnosis, and Treatment Options - WebMD
Understand why frequent urination occurs, how it’s diagnosed, and the best treatment options to improve bladder symptoms
- The Urinary Tract How It Works - NIDDK
For normal urination to occur, all body parts in the urinary tract need to work together, and in the correct order The urinary tract includes two kidneys, two ureters, a bladder, and a urethra
- Urination | Process, Function Control | Britannica
Urination, the process of excreting urine from the urinary bladder Nerve centres for the control of urination are located in the spinal cord, the brainstem, and the cerebral cortex (the outer substance of the large upper portion of the brain) Both involuntary and voluntary muscles are involved
- What really causes frequent urination and when should you worry?
What really causes frequent urination and when should you worry? Frequent urination—needing to empty your bladder more than eight times in 24 hours—most often stems from over-hydration, caffeine, urinary tract infection, overactive bladder, or uncontrolled diabetes
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