What is Bladder Irritability Syndrome?
Bladder irritation syndrome mainly refers to frequent urination, painful urination, and urgency. There are many causes of bladder irritation syndrome, mainly due to inflammation. When this happens, it is necessary to conduct timely examinations to understand the specific causes, to check whether there are bacteria in the urine, whether there is hematuria, and to understand whether there is infection in the urinary and reproductive systems as well as the kidneys.
Bladder irritation syndrome refers to frequent urination, urgency, and painful urination. Normal people urinate an average of 4 to 6 times during the day and 0 to 2 times at night. If the number of daily urinations exceeds 8 times, it is considered frequent urination. Urgency refers to the sensation of needing to urinate immediately when the urge to urinate comes. Painful urination refers to the pain felt in the bladder area and urethra during urination, with a burning or stabbing sensation.
1. Laboratory Tests: Urine analysis often reveals pyuria or bacteriuria, and sometimes hematuria can be detected visually or under a microscope. Urine culture can detect pathogenic bacteria. If there are no other urinary system diseases, serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen are normal.
2. X-ray Examination: Patients suspected of having kidney infection or other abnormalities of the urinary and reproductive tracts should undergo X-ray examination. For patients with Proteus vulgaris infection, if the treatment effect is poor or there is no effect at all, X-ray examination should be performed to determine whether there is a combination of urinary tract stones.
3. Instrumental Examination: Cystoscopy is necessary when the patient has obvious bleeding, but it must be performed after the acute phase of infection or after the infection has been adequately treated.