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- Q474914 subject Q13295925.
- Q474914 subject Q8938019.
- Q474914 abstract "Strangury is the symptom described in Western medicine and Chinese traditional medicine, characterized by painful, frequent urination of small volumes that are expelled slowly only by straining and despite a severe sense of urgency, usually with the residual feeling of incomplete emptying. The origin of the term is late 14th c. Middle English from Latin strangūria, from Greek, from stranx a drop squeezed out + ouron urine. These 'drops' of urine are 'squeezed out' in what sufferers describe as painful 'wrenching' spasms. The pain is felt to arise in the suprapubic region, extends up to the root of the genitalia and in male patients, to the tip of the penis.This distressing desire to fully void despite its impossibility is attributed to the irritation of urothelium (epithelium lining the urinary tract), especially of the trigone, and subsequent spasm of muscles. It is seen in numerous urological conditions including kidney stones, (especially when a stone is impacted at the vesicourethral junction), bladder stones, bladder inflammation (cystitis), and bladder cancer.".
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q101991.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q105726.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q11878994.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q13295925.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q178623.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q200253.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q221668.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q2319686.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q3144280.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q3539143.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q36395.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q3825881.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q3858636.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q41301.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q4620674.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q504775.
- Q474914 wikiPageWikiLink Q8938019.
- Q474914 comment "Strangury is the symptom described in Western medicine and Chinese traditional medicine, characterized by painful, frequent urination of small volumes that are expelled slowly only by straining and despite a severe sense of urgency, usually with the residual feeling of incomplete emptying. The origin of the term is late 14th c. Middle English from Latin strangūria, from Greek, from stranx a drop squeezed out + ouron urine.".
- Q474914 label "Strangury".