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1 discomfort, dysuria, and urgent or frequent urination.
2 d increased thirst, dry mouth, and increased urination.
3 elial cells and sensory neurons that control urination.
4 here were no adverse events and no impact on urination.
5 y urination and using maneuvers to stimulate urination.
6 tion time 100-fold over that of typical male urination.
7 ressing urethral neurons that are engaged by urination.
8 tral circuitry in the brain that facilitates urination(1-3), there is a lack of in-depth mechanistic
13 lso present enlarged bladders with dribbling urination and develop urinary infection and bladder ston
15 pondents experienced body weakness, frequent urination and excessive thirst when diagnosed of diabete
16 ients reported less sleep disruptions due to urination and fewer episodes of uncontrollable diarrhea
18 patients more frequently achieving voluntary urination and using maneuvers to stimulate urination.
20 ymptoms (bowel function tenderness, frequent urination, and erectile dysfunction [ED]) and measures o
21 ich increases bladder pressure to facilitate urination, and urethral sphincters and pelvic floor musc
23 al control, micturition reflexes that govern urination are all initiated by peripheral mechanical sti
27 n of RT to surgery resulted in more frequent urination, as well as early report of more bowel dysfunc
28 result of contamination from defecation and urination atop guano and which reflect the close interac
29 have extreme bladder enlargement, dribbling urination, bladder infection, urinary stones, and widely
32 les), detecting raised-leg and squat posture urinations by monitoring the change in device orientatio
34 ng assistance (2.85; 1.27-6.42) and use of a urination device (1.79; 1.01-3.18) as significantly asso
35 is in the vulva and insomnia due to frequent urination during the season of cedar pollen disseminatio
37 2500 mequiv/L acetic acid added after every urination event was able to inhibit urea hydrolysis in s
39 echanical compliance, resulting in increased urination frequency in mice in a mast cell-independent m
41 s of health-related quality of life, sexual, urination, gender practices, voice, hair, face and neck,
42 ns, sexual advances, trespassing, and public urination in contrast with those in the AD group, who co
43 e early storage phase and displayed frequent urination in inappropriate places without a change in vo
45 symptoms of hyperglycemia, such as frequent urination, increased thirst, fatigue, or visual changes,
47 in animals have shown that the frequency of urination is inversely associated with the level of pote
48 r current understanding of fluid dynamics in urination, jetting fluids like their larger mammalian co
49 interactions are often accompanied by active urination (micturition), which is considered a mechanism
52 of life, men who are more bothered by their urination or impotence are more likely to report worse q
54 eted bladder irradiation resulted in altered urination patterns in the acute post-IRR phase, coincide
57 rrhagia, bulk-related symptoms (frequency of urination, sensation of pressure, sensation of mass), or
58 at have matching bodyweights change data and urination sound data were collected, and fivefold cross
60 tosterone reported increased difficulty with urination, suggesting an exacerbation of benign prostati
61 of the three sealant fluids during simulated urination to a urinal cartridge but removal of seven oth
65 14.8) while the mean bodyweight change after urination was 208.0 g (SD: +/- 121.5), and there was a s
68 animals to develop hyperglycemia, excessive urination, weight loss, microalbuminuria, nephrinuria an