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KIDNEY STONES
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You will usually be unaware until the kidney stones detach themselves from your kidney walls and start moving into your ureters, bladder, and urethra as you pee.
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Overactive Bladder is defined based on symptoms of urgency, with or without urge incontinence, usually with frequency and nocturia, in the absence of pathological or metabolic conditions that might explain these symptoms
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OVERACTIVE BLADDER
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BENIGN PROSTATE ENLARGEMENT
The term BPH used in the common clinical setting refers to the condition in which benign (non-cancerous) enlargement of the prostate gland is associated with urinary symptoms such as difficulty in urination and increased frequency of urination.
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BENIGN PROSTATE ENLARGEMENT
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HEMATURIA
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Chances are high of you have gross hematuria (visible blood in the urine) if the colour of your urine ranges from pink to red and brown. Normal urine should be pale yellow to dark yellow depending on how hydrated you are. You can also find out if you have microscopic hematuria via a urine test.
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