Is it bad to hold your pee Heba Shaheed

It begins with a bit of discomfort

and soon becomes a pressing sensation
that’s impossible to ignore.

Finally, it’s all you can think about,

and out of sheer desperation,

you go on a hunt for a bathroom
until “ahh.”

Humans should urinate at least
four to six times a day,

but occasionally, the pressures of modern
life forces us to clench and hold it in.

How bad is this habit,
and how long can our bodies withstand it?

The answers lie in the workings
of the bladder,

an oval pouch
that sits inside the pelvis.

Surrounding this structure
are several other organs

that together make up the whole
urinary system.

Two kidneys,

two ureters,

two urethral sphincters,

and a urethra.

Constantly trickling down from the kidneys
is the yellowish liquid known as urine.

The kidneys make urine from a mix
of water and the body’s waste products,

funneling the unwanted fluid
into two muscular tubes called ureters.

These carry it downward into
the hollow organ known as the bladder.

This organ’s muscular wall is made of
tissue called detrusor muscle

which relaxes as the bladder fills
allowing it to inflate like a balloon.

As the bladder gets full,
the detrusor contracts.

The internal urethral sphincter
automatically and involuntarily opens,

and the urine is released.

Whooshing downwards,
the fluid enters the urethra

and stops short at the external
urethral sphincter.

This works like a tap.

When you want to delay urinating,
you keep the sphincter closed.

When you want to release it,
you can voluntarily open the flood gates.

But how do you sense
your bladder’s fullness

so you know when to pee?

Inside the layers of detrusor muscles
are millions of stretch receptors

that get triggered as the bladder fills.

They send signals along your nerves
to the sacral region in your spinal cord.

A reflex signal travels back to
your bladder,

making the detrusor muscle
contract slightly

and increasing the bladder’s pressure
so you’re aware that it’s filling up.

Simultaneously, the internal
urethral sphincter opens.

This is called the micturition reflex.

The brain can counter it if it’s not
a good time to urinate

by sending another signal to contract
the external urethral sphincter.

With about 150 to 200 milliliters of urine
inside of it,

the bladder’s muscular wall
is stretched enough

for you to sense
that there’s urine within.

At about 400 to 500 milliliters,
the pressure becomes uncomfortable.

The bladder can go on stretching,
but only to a point.

Above 1,000 milliliters, it may burst.

Most people would lose bladder
control before this happens,

but in very rare cases,

such as when as a person can’t sense
the need to urinate,

the pouch can rupture painfully
requiring surgery to fix.

But under normal circumstances,

your decision to urinate stops the brain’s
signal to the external urethral sphincter,

causing it to relax
and the bladder to empty.

The external urethral sphincter
is one of the muscles of the pelvic floor,

and it provides support to the urethra
and bladder neck.

It’s lucky we have these
pelvic floor muscles

because placing pressure on the system
by coughing,

sneezing,

laughing,

or jumping could cause bladder leakage.

Instead, the pelvic floor muscles
keep the region sealed

until you’re ready to go.

But holding it in for too long,

forcing out your urine too fast,

or urinating without proper
physical support

may over time weaken or overwork
that muscular sling.

That can lead to an overactive
pelvic floor,

bladder pain,

urgency,

or urinary incontinence.

So in the interest of long-term health,

it’s not a great habit to hold your pee.

But in the short term, at least,
your body and brain have got you covered,

so you can conveniently choose
your moment of sweet release.

它从有点不适开始

,很快就变成了
一种无法忽视的紧迫感。

最后,这就是你所能想到的

,出于纯粹的绝望,

你继续寻找浴室,
直到“啊”。

人类每天至少应该小便
四到六次,

但偶尔,现代生活的压力
迫使我们咬紧牙关。

这种习惯有多糟糕,
我们的身体能承受多久?

答案在于膀胱的运作
,这


一个位于骨盆内的椭圆形小袋。

围绕这个结构的
是其他几个器官

,它们共同构成了整个
泌尿系统。

两个肾脏、

两个输尿管、

两个尿道括约肌

和一个尿道。

不断从肾脏流出的
是被称为尿液的淡黄色液体。

肾脏从
水和身体废物的混合物中产生尿液,

将不需要的液体汇集
到两个称为输尿管的肌肉管中。

这些将其向下带到
称为膀胱的中空器官中。

该器官的肌肉壁由
称为逼尿肌的组织组成

,当膀胱充满时
,它会放松,使其像气球一样膨胀。

随着膀胱充满
,逼尿肌收缩。

尿道内括约肌
自动、不由自主地张开

,排尿。

向下呼呼
,液体进入尿道

并在
尿道外括约肌处停止。

这就像一个水龙头。

当您想延迟排尿时,
请保持括约肌关闭。

当你想释放它时,
你可以自愿打开闸门。

但是你如何感觉到
你的膀胱充盈,

所以你知道什么时候小便呢?

在逼尿肌层
内有数以百万计的拉伸感受器

,当膀胱充满时它们会被触发。

它们沿着你的神经
向脊髓的骶骨区域发送信号。

反射信号传回
您的膀胱,

使逼尿肌
轻微收缩

并增加膀胱的压力,
因此您知道它正在充盈。

同时,
尿道内括约肌打开。

这被称为排尿反射。

如果不是
排尿的好时机,大脑可以

通过发送另一个信号来
收缩尿道外括约肌来对抗它。

里面有大约 150 到 200 毫升的尿液

,膀胱的肌肉壁
被拉伸到足以

让你
感觉到里面有尿液。

在大约 400 到 500 毫升时
,压力会变得不舒服。

膀胱可以继续伸展,
但只能伸展到一定程度。

超过 1,000 毫升,它可能会爆裂。

大多数人会
在这种情况发生之前失去对膀胱的控制,

但在极少数情况下,

例如当一个人感觉不到
需要排尿时

,膀胱可能会破裂,
需要手术修复。

但在正常情况下,

您排尿的决定会阻止大脑
向尿道外括约肌发出信号,

导致其放松
,膀胱排空。

尿道外括约肌
是骨盆底的肌肉之一

,它为尿道
和膀胱颈提供支撑。

幸运的是,我们有这些
骨盆底肌肉,

因为
通过咳嗽、

打喷嚏、

大笑

或跳跃对系统施加压力可能会导致膀胱渗漏。

相反,骨盆底肌肉
保持该区域密封,

直到您准备好出发。

但是,

憋得太久、排尿太快

或在没有适当身体支撑的情况下排尿

可能会随着时间的推移而削弱或过度
使用肌肉吊索。

这可能导致盆底过度活动

膀胱疼痛、

尿急

或尿失禁。

所以为了长期健康

,憋尿并不是一个好习惯。

但至少在短期内,
你的身体和大脑已经得到了保障,

所以你可以方便地选择
你的甜蜜释放时刻。