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Dysuria is the medical term for pain or discomfort when urinating. Often described as a burning sensation, dysuria most commonly is caused by bacterial infections of the urinary tract.
Causes:
- Side effect of medication: Diuretics and other medications can increase urinary frequency.
- Age-related changes: Weakening of the muscles of the bladder, urethra and pelvic floor many lower the amount of the urine the bladder can store as well as the ability to hold or properly eliminate urine.
- Prostate problems: For men, an enlarged or infected prostate can lead to urgency and frequent urination, especially at night.
- Radiation treatment: Treating cancers near the bladder (rectum or pubic bone cancers) may damage the bladder wall. The urgency or frequency that may result usually diminishes within a few weeks to a year.
- Bladder problems: Frequent or urgent urination can be an early sign of bladder cancer. Bladder stones or bladder inflammation also can cause frequent or painful urination.
- Diabetes: When excess blood sugar is excreted into urine, it draws water from the body’s tissues, increasing the need to urinate.
- Kidney disease: Diseases that cause kidney decline may affect the kidneys’ ability to concentrate urine, increasing the amount of urine produced.
Symptoms:
- Lower urinary tract infection (cystitis) — Frequent urination, an intense urge to urinate, loss of bladder control, pain in the lower front portion of the abdomen (near the bladder), cloudy urine that may have a strong odor, bloody urine
- Upper urinary tract infection (pyelonephritis) — Pain in the upper back, high fever with shaking chills, nausea and vomiting, cloudy urine, frequent urination, an intense urge to urinate
- Urethritis — A discharge from the urethra, redness around the opening of the urethra, frequent urination, vaginal discharge. Partners of people with urethritis that comes from a sexually transmitted disease often will not have any symptoms.
- Vaginitis — Pain, soreness or itching in the vagina, an abnormal or foul-smelling vaginal discharge or odor, pain or discomfort during sexual intercourse
Diagnosis:
- Drink lot of water, Take healthy food, Avoid smoking/Alcohol
- Some problems may require the attention of a urologist, a doctor who specializes in treating problems of the urinary system.
- If your doctor thinks you have a simple bladder infection, he or she usually can confirm this with a urine test in the doctor’s office.
- To diagnose urethritis and vaginitis, a swab of the infected area may need to be taken and sent for testing.
- Indian spinach
- Barley
- Cumin
Ingredients:
Natural Remedies:
- Spinach is one of the top 10 healthy vegetables that you can eat. This wonder green leafy vegetable can be eaten in many different ways but to enjoy its maximum nutritional value, it should be consumed fresh (juice), steamed, or quickly boiled. Apart from being a rich source of many vitamins like A, B, C, E and K, spinach is also rich in many essential minerals like manganese, magnesium, iron, calcium and potassium. Additionally it is known to be a good source of omega-3 fatty acids, niacin and selenium.
- Barley grains are a valuable source of the vitamins, minerals and fiber that are an essential part of keeping the immune system healthy.
- Cumin is a seed that has been used since antiquity. Its health benefits and medicinal uses were well known even then. Recent studies have revealed that cumin seeds might also have anti-carcinogenic properties. In laboratory tests, this powerful little seed was shown to reduce the risk of stomach and liver tumors in animals.
Take same quantity of barley and cumin; soak into Indian spinach leaves juice. After some times, dry and powder it. Then boil with water and drink it.


