I’m male and 22. Why is it that immediately after urinating I always have to keep cleaning and jerking my penis for like 5-10 minutes to get all the urine out? The urine just keeps flowing and flowing and flowing in short bursts long before I have finished urinating. I never have any actual incontinence outside of the toilet but it just seems like something is off. This doesn’t happen to my friends.
When I go to public bathrooms I always have to use the sitting toilets because I know that after peeing I’m going to have to spend like 5-10 minutes just cleaning my penis with a cloth or a piece of toilet paper until it stops leaking. It would be weird if people saw me cleaning my penis with a cloth.
For a while, when I was very young, I wouldn’t clean after taking a leak and soon after leaving the toilet I would have a big pee stain on my pants.
I have no smegma. I clean fairly often. I’m uncircuncised.
I pee with the foreskin covering the glands. I’ve tried peeing by pulling back the skin but it doesn’t seem to make much of a difference.
Any suggestions?
P.S. It can’t be an STD or anything because I’ve always had this problem.
Its normal for guys to get a few ‘extra drops’ right after when they think they’ve finished going! But you may want to discuss this with your doctor as it sounds like you have more of an issue with it.
Regarding your foreskin, its recommended to pee with it pulled back over the glans for improved hygiene, also you’ll spend less time cleaning it with the toiletpaper.
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My Sheltie was taken to the vet today after urinating several times on our belongings and bedding. I did witness blood in her urine and took her ASAP this morning.
Indeed, she has 3 to four bladder stones and a urinary infection. She was given an antibiotic to clear up the infection and "Hill’s PRESCRIPTION DIET s/d" to be eaten everyday for 2 to 5 months in hope of dissolving the stones.
The other option was surgery-$1,500. She’s 3 years old and the vet explained that this food can cause the stones to disolve to nothing or even be urinated out when small enough.
Has anyone had experience treating dog bladder stones or with this food? Any other suggestions?
Thanks so much!
My Basset Hound had bladder stones. The x-rays showed hundreds of them. From tiny grains of sand up to larger stones. He did not recommend food to me until after the dog had surgery to remove the stones. We had the surgery done at less than 1/2 of what you’ve been quoted. I think the final bill was around $600.00. Why don’t you phone around to some other vets and get some prices.
If surgery is not an option for you, try the food and see what happens. You really only have 2 choices. Food, or surgery.
Good luck
Hello–
My 3 year old Sheltie was just examined today and has 3 to 4 bladder stones. She was given an antibiotic and "Hill’s PRESCRIPTION DIET s/d" to delove the stones over time.
I’ve been doing some reasearch and have found some "herbal" treatments that claim to disolve the stones and are pills NOT food.
Do theses work?
Below are two exaples:
http://www.allergicpet.com/products/kidney_bladder_stones.html?source=GoogleStonesAdword&gclid=CPuXpaXywp4CFQKdnAodJmYAow
AND
http://www.pawhealer.com/bladder-kidney-stone.aspx#top
Thanks!
Sorry don’t know about these prepared treatments…prepared treatments often have very little of the herbal/homoeopathic ingredients required to do the job correctly
As for Hill’s PRESCRIPTION DIET s/d" that won’t help at all
These are some active natural ingredients that do work/have worked and you need a RAW diet, not one full of grains like Hill’s
http://www.natural-dog-health-remedies.com/canine-bladder-stones.html
You can contact a homoeopathic vet who will prescribe the correct treatment for your dog, many vets are now training in homoeopathy and acupressure etc and you can Google it and find one near you they will then use vet prescribed medicine for acute and homoeopathy for chronic illness, getting the best for your dog.
Is it normal to continue to have tingling in bladder after treatment with antibiotics?
Do symptoms sometimes take awhile to go away completely after a uti?
It is like a shooting tingly sensation that comes and goes after I pee. I am taking azo cranberry pills and was wondering if maybe they are causing the tingling? The tingling sensaton is the only symptom I have left, I was treated last friday through sunday with tmz antiobiotic and also in the beginning of June with ten days of cipro for the same thing…
Antibiotics can cause also cause yeast infections. I have had yeast infections in the past and all were caused after a treatment of antibiotics for UTI. Yeast infections are just uncomfortable and can cause burning when you pee and maybe the tingling sensation your having. I am not sure if that would be the problem, but I always expect a yeast infection if I have used antibiotics. But never hurts to check with your doctor if you still have problems. Something else could be going on.
I am a 23 year old male college Senior, I still wet the bed on occasion. It happens once every few years, but when it happens its for 2-3 weeks straight. Does anyone know of a medical reason this might happen? Does anyone have any advice about how to deal with sleeping arrangements? (I live with my girlfriend, we only have one bed) I think its odd that it only happens every few years, but it bothers me enough when it happens that I am looking for some answers about possible causes. Please cite any sources that might be helpful.
There are few obvious medical reasons for this, and it is not actually so uncommon but you describe it happening in "clusters" which is – interesting. There are medications, but they require a doctor’s prescription – and have annoying side effects if you are not really sick.
You need a "pad and bell" alarm. You wear a little pad with a copper pattern on it, held inside a thin cotton pouch, inside your underwear (yes, slightly inconvenient!) and placed directly over your penis so that the moment you start to pee, it conducts an electric current (at too low a voltage for you to feel it) across the pattern and the pad has wires connecting it to a box which you sit right next to your pillow so that immediately the pad is wet, it sounds a loud alarm and startles you out of sleep – which should also stop you peeing.
You then have to get up, wash off the pad and find a new, dry cotton pouch to put it back in (change your undies and anything else necessary – easiest to simply sleep on a once-folded towel as I suspect you already do) and go back to bed/ sleep.
Notice I did not say at this point, to pee (or finish peeing) just because you got up! If you *really* feel you need to, you can, but your problem is *not* that you can’t hold it because I presume you are fine holding it in the daytime, so in fact you should *not* try too hard to reduce the amount of urine you make overnight. The problem is that you have to *teach* yourself not to start the peeing process while you are asleep, or else to wake up. The "pad and bell" alarm is to train you that if you have to pee, you wake up – first!
A couple of other things. It *may* help you a little to practice holding for longer in the daytime. It will help a little to know when you go and pee, is the amount that comes out normal? You can get a measuring jug (only costs a few dollars) and see just how much you pee each time during the day. Learn what is happening – normal is about 200 to 300 ml depending on the habits you taught yourself as a child. Less than that suggests you just like going to the toilet. 500 ml or so can be held fairly easily, up to 600 or 700 if you are busy exercising and not sitting or standing still.
Sleeping it is actually not unreasonable to hold out for 900 ml to 1 litre, even up to 1100 ml or so. Of course, as soon as you wake up with anything like that, you *will* have to go.
And finally, an interesting question – when you pee in your sleep, were you *dreaming* that you were peeing? This is not uncommon.
It seems my body is confused. For the last few years right about fall I seem to get progressively worse over active bladder which reaches it worst and plateaus around early November, in February till about spring in gets better then right about the beginning of spring i seem to gain an overflow incontinence. The ability to stimulate seems to follow a similar pattern (easy to stimulate during over active bladder, hard to stimulate during overflow incontinence). Is there any reason behind this?
late september till mid march overactive bladder and easily stimulable, mid march till late september overflow incontinence and difficult to stimulate.
Barometric pressure can cause a lot of changes to your body, bladder included. Every body reacts to it differently.
I’d say from what you said that it could be caused by Barometric changes as well as changes in diet. Make sure you are still drinking enough water.
If you have any painful urination see a Dr. and take some anti-biotics.
*Remember, water can help flush out any toxins..

