8 The Facts We Need to Know About Our Health

While we often ignore and pay due attention because everything seems to be going well, urine is one of the main elements that can reveal health problems. When something obvious, such as a severe smell or a normal color changes, then caution should be taken. If urine looks like the color of light beer, [...]
While we often ignore and pay due attention because everything seems to be going well, urine is one of the main elements that can reveal health problems.
When something obvious, such as a severe smell or a normal color changes, then caution should be taken.
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If the urine looks like the color of light beer, it means that you have to consume more water, and if it's dark, it can signal a bacterial infection, but what's going on if it looks foamed?
Something's going wrong and here's what you need to know if your piss is foaming:
1. You could have just peed fast.
The amount of bubbles in urine is normal, and it can be affected by the speed of urine and how much you have been without going to the bathroom.
A normal urinary flow flows about 15 milliliters per second, but not necessarily.
2. Kidneys are not working properly
Kidneys work to filter blood and urine substances, specifically proteins so when your urine looks foamed, it can be because of excess proteins, which indicate something is wrong with your kidneys.
Under normal circumstances, kidney filters do not allow proteins from blood to pass into urine. An increase in protein in urine is generally evidence of a kidney filter damaged.
But foaming urine is just a sign of a damaged kidney, other signs include swelling because of the fluid or weight gain, and if you are experiencing any of these symptoms, it is time to visit a doctor
3. You've been dehydrated
Water is one of the substances found in the urine so if you're not consuming enough water, your urine will be foamed.
The more dehydrated you are, the stronger the urine will be, and the result will be foaming.
4. You have diabetes or hypertension
The protein in the urine is back in play. Both conditions: diabetes, which affects body insulin levels and hypertension, can affect the flow of blood on the kidneys by damaging their function.
This pressure causes increased stress, which leads to injury and affects hunger. Both diabetes and hypertension have other symptoms, and also-diabetes often come with greater hunger and thirst, while hypertension can appear as pain in the chest.
5. You have a chronic infection
Chronic infections such as hepatitis or HIV can also cause excessive proteins in hunger.
Some infections may directly attack kidney filters, others causing inflammation that can affect kidney function.
6. You may have taken medication for pain
If you've taken too long medication for pain like Advil, Mottin, and Ales then they might be the cause of foaming urine.
They can increase protein levels in your urine or result in an allergic reaction that causes inflammation in your kidneys.
7. You have an autoimmune disease
Autoimmune diseases also cause stress and strain on the kidneys, causing enough damage to disrupt the filtration process.
Autoimmune diseases can lead proteins to urine through the immune system by attacking kidney filters themselves.
8. You can have some kind of blood cancer
Multiple myeloma, a type of cancer that forms plasma blood cells, can lead to additional proteins in urine and cause foam. Antibody produced as a result of cancer can be highly toxic for kidney filters and can lead proteins to urine.
But this is rare: The American Cancer Society says multiple mieloma is a relatively unusual and popular cancer in people over 65 and is twice as common in African-Americans.










