Urination - difficulty with flow Health Article

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Reviewer Info: David C. Dugdale, III, MD, Professor of Medicine, Division of General Medicine, Department of Medicine, University of Washington School of Medicine; and Scott Miller, MD, Urologist in private practice in Atlanta, GA. Also reviewed by David Zieve, MD, MHA, Medical Director, A.D.A.M., Inc.; ADAM Health Illustrated Encyclopedia, 09/30/2009
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Definition

Difficulty starting or maintaining a urinary stream is called urinary hesitancy.

Alternative Names

Delayed urination; Hesitancy; Difficulty initiating urination

Considerations

Urinary hesitancy affects people of all ages and occurs in both sexes, but it is most common in older men with enlarged prostate glands.

Urinary hesitancy usually comes on gradually. It sometimes goes unnoticed until urinary retention (complete inability to urinate) produces distention and discomfort in the bladder.

Almost all older men have some degree of difficulty in starting urination, dribbling, or decreased force of their urinary stream.

Common Causes

Urinary hesitancy can be caused by:

Home Care

  • Monitor, record, and report your urination patterns to your doctor.
  • Apply heat to your lower abdomen (below your belly button and above the pubic bone). This is where the bladder lies. The heat relaxes muscles and aids urination.
  • Massage or place light pressure over your bladder to stimulate emptying.
  • Drink plenty of fluid
  • For infections, antibiotics from your doctor will be needed. Symptoms that suggest a possible infection include burning or pain with urination, frequent urination, cloudy urine, and a sense of urgency (strong, sudden urge to urinate).
  • Pay close attention to any medicines or supplements you take.

Call your health care provider if

If you have not been evaluated for this problem previously, you should call your doctor for urinary hesitancy, dribbling, or weak urine stream.

Call your doctor right away if:

  • You have fever, vomiting, side or back pain, shaking chills, or are passing little urine for 1-2 days
  • You have blood in your urine, cloudy urine, frequent or urgent need to urinate, or a discharge from the penis or vagina
  • You are unable to pass urine

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