Showing posts with label Kidney Stones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kidney Stones. Show all posts

Wednesday 29 July 2020

Urine Trouble - Eliminating the Cause of Prostate Enlargement, Kidney Stones and Bladder Infections


By Sydney Ross Singer

Have you ever felt a burning need to urinate, but had to hold it in? Perhaps you were driving along the highway, and the next rest area was still 50 miles ahead.  Or maybe you were attending a seminar or class, or were at the theater or a concert, and you just didn't want to leave for the restroom simply because your bladder was full.

Our culture gives us millions of reasons for holding in urine.  In fact, to be successful in society, we sometimes need to defer this personal biological need.  Our training as waste retainers starts with diapers.  While other creatures have the freedom to eliminate waste when the need arises, we humans living in modern, Western civilization need to carefully plan our excretions to make them convenient to our busy schedules, and appropriately performed and flushed away.  In fact, we secretly pride ourselves on our ability to hold in urine.  It reflects our high degree of training and civility. Being civilized means we no longer assert our animalistic need to pee without proper decorum and timing.  However, there is a price to this civility!

Medicine says nothing about the common practice of holding in urine.  In fact, the entire issue is ignored, as is unfortunately the case with most cultural practices that affect our health.  Most doctors hold in their own urine, as well, especially surgeons during surgery.  Doctors and medical researchers are trained, like the rest of society, to conform to our culture's idiosyncratic ways.  This makes medicine and doctors oblivious to the obvious, since we all tend to overlook our own personal foibles. Obviously, holding in waste cannot be good for you.  Once you reflect on what is in the waste, where it is stored, and what happens when the pressure of holding it in builds to unnaturally high levels, the serious cost of urine retention becomes clear.

Urine is a filtrate from the blood.  The kidneys require blood pressure to force this filtration of the blood.  Once the kidneys process the filtrate, it becomes urine.  This then passively flows down to thin tubes, called the ureters, one ureter for each kidney.  The ureters empty into the bladder, which expands to accommodate the fluid.  Once the bladder expands to a certain limit, a reflex is started that causes urination.  That is, if we allow the reflex to operate naturally.

Urine is predominately a salt solution, along with other waste products.  When you hold it in, the pressure in the bladder builds, causing the urine to concentrate.  The longer you hold in urine, the more concentrated it will become.  What can happen to a salt solution when it becomes concentrated?  It can precipitate, forming crystals.  It's simple chemistry.  These crystals are called stones. 

In addition to concentrating the urine, bladder pressure will resist the flow from the ureters of new urine from the kidneys.  This will lead to a back-up of all the plumbing, so to speak, as the kidneys themselves ultimately get hampered in their ability to filter the blood.  This increases the toxin load of the bloodstream and can cause metabolic problems.  It also inhibits water and salt elimination, and can contribute to high blood pressure and heart disease.

And there's more!  When you look at the male anatomy of the pelvic region, you will see that the bladder is directly above the prostate gland.  Underneath the prostate is the pelvic floor.  The pelvic floor and bladder essentially make a prostate sandwich.  An over-filled bladder will press on the prostate.  No gland likes pressure, since pressure reduces its blood flow and general operation.  If severe and frequent enough, the bladder pressure may cause the prostate to enlarge to better cushion itself form the bladder burden.  It is medically known that prolonged horseback riding or bicycle riding can lead to prostate enlargement due to pressure from the bottom up.  A full bladder causes pressure from the top down.  A cause of prostate enlargement, which is very common in Western cultures, may thus be this cultural penchant for urine retention.

Another problem that may result from an over-stretched bladder and its storage of concentrated waste is the bladder wall and ureters may become irritated and damaged.  This may increase the likelihood of succumbing to bacterial invasion.  Bladder and urinary tract infections may, therefore, be another product of urine retention.

We would like to suggest the following self study for those interested in improving their urinary tract, prostate, and kidney health.  Here is what you do.  Whenever you feel the urge to urinate, do so.  Don't wait or delay.  Keep note of times you do delay.  If you have a history of kidney stones, bladder infections, or prostate enlargement, reflect honestly on your tendency to hold it in.  It may be an occupational problem, such as bus and truck drivers, pilots, doctors, lawyers, and others unable to stop what they are doing simply to pee.  It may be a discomfort with using public restrooms.  No matter what the reason, there's no excuse for storing refuse.

One further note.  For fear of having to urinate at an inappropriate time, some people may avoid drinking water.  This will lead to dehydration and even more concentrated urine.  Interestingly, doctors tell patients with a history of kidney stones to drink more.  Of course, it's hard to take it in if you are not letting it out.

According to modern medicine, the cause of most kidney stones is unknown.  More than 50% of Americans will experience at least one kidney stone in his or her lifetime.  Passing these stones can be one of the most painful experiences of a lifetime.  Doctors recommend drugs, sonic beams, or surgery to deal with the problem.

It is never mentioned that we live in a culture that makes urination a pain, literally.

Sydney Ross Singer is a medical anthropologist and director of the Institute for the Study of Culturogenic Disease, located in Hawaii.  His unique form of applied medical anthropology searches for the cultural/lifestyle causes of disease.  His working assumption is that our bodies were made to be healthy, but our culture and the attitudes and behaviors it instills in us can get in the way of health.  By eliminating these causes, the body is allowed to heal.  Since most diseases of our time are caused by our culture/lifestyle, this approach has resulted in many original discoveries into the cause, and cure, of many common diseases.  It also makes prevention possible by eliminating adverse lifestyle practices.  Sydney works with his co-researcher and wife, Soma Grismaijer, and is the author of several groundbreaking health books.

Sydney's background includes a B.S. in biology from the University of Utah; an M.A. degree from Duke University in biochemistry and anthropology; 2 years of medical school training at UTMB at Galveston, along with Ph.D. training in medical humanities.


If you are tired of feeling wasted, read our book, Get It Out! Eliminating the Cause of Diverticulitis, Kidney Stones, Bladder Infections, Cervical Dysplasia, PMS, Menopausal Discomfort, Prostate Enlargement, and More!   It's available online at our website, http://www.SelfStudyCenter.org

Sydney Ross Singer and Soma Grismaijer can be reached at the Institute for the Study of Culturogenic Disease, P.O. Box 1880, Pahoa, Hawaii 96778  (808) 935-5563.   [mailto:sydsinger@gmail.com]sydsinger@gmail.com

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Sunday 5 July 2020

Kidney Congestion, Kidney Stones and Fluid Retention - Contributory Factors Of Weight Gain


By Andreas Moritz

The kidneys perform one of the most delicate balancing acts in the human body - maintaining the right acid-alkaline concentration of sodium and potassium in the blood and other fluids. While sodium is an alkaline mineral, potassium is acidic. The ratio between these two natural minerals is expressed as the pH (power of hydrogen) value and needs to be maintained within an extremely narrow range.

One of the main reasons is that every one of the 100 trillion cells in your body needs a certain specific pH value so that they can perform even their basic functions. This job is entrusted to the kidneys. If your body's internal environment tilts towards being acidic, you run the risk of suffering from acidosis, and depending on your diet, you will speed towards a toxicity crisis. Alternatively, if your blood and other fluids tilt towards being too alkaline, you run the risk of alkalosis.

When the optimal pH value is under threat, the kidneys are forced to take defensive action in an attempt to restore the imbalance. Among these measures are kidney congestion, kidney stones and fluid retention, all of which are associated with weight gain.

As we have seen with other organs such as the liver, small intestine and bowels, congestion causes a toxicity crisis, which in turn leads to various health issues such as obesity, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, stomach ulcers, hypertension, cancer, multiple sclerosis, Alzheimer's, and many other chronic diseases.

Some of the main factors contributing to toxicity and kidney congestion are dehydration and the consumption of acid-forming foods.

Dehydration results from insufficient water intake; consuming foods and beverages that have a dehydrating effect (meat, artificial sweeteners, sugar, alcohol, tea, coffee and sodas); smoking cigarettes; or watching television for too many hours at a stretch.

Feeding off a diet rich in acid-forming foods, such as meat, fish, dairy products, baked goods, candy, and sugar, is another way the kidneys get congested, as is consuming food and beverages that contain large amounts of oxalic acid.

Body drought occurs when you don't drink enough water. Most individuals substitute this life-giving fluid with processed beverages and drinks with caffeine such as tea and coffee.

When the body is dehydrated, the pH value gets altered. Also, the amount of water outside the cells increases to help neutralize the toxic waste products that have accumulated there. The kidneys begin to hold on to water, drastically reducing urinary secretion and causing further retention of potentially harmful waste products. As a result, fluid builds up in various parts of the body, selectively in some individuals and across tissues and organs in others. This puffiness and bloating, also called water edema, leads to weight gain.

If water retention alone does not actually make an individual obese, it is usually a contributory factor, more in some individuals than others. Normally, cellular enzymes signal to the brain when cells run low on water. Enzymes in dehydrated cells, however, become so inefficient that they are no longer able to register the drought-like condition. Subsequently, they fail to convey the emergency situation to the brain, which would normally push the 'thirst alarm button'. This results in a vicious cycle.

At the neurotransmitter level, the Renin-Angiotensin (RA) system is activated whenever there is a water shortage in the body. Apart from signaling the kidneys to inhibit urination, it also signals the blood vessels to constrict to reduce the amount of fluid circulating, which could potentially cause water loss. This is one reason why obesity is usually accompanied by cardiovascular diseases such as hypertension. The RA system also stimulates an increase in the absorption of sodium or salt, which helps the body retain water.

Ironic as it may sound, the main solution for water retention is to drink water! That's because it facilitates the release of toxins and brings down the acid levels in the blood and other fluids. The body no longer needs to store water to save itself. Here's something you might want to think about if you're not drinking sufficient water:

An estimated 75 percent of Americans are chronically dehydrated
In 37 percent of Americans, the thirst mechanism is so weak, it is mistaken for hunger. According to research at the University of Washington, drinking just one glass of water shuts down midnight hunger for almost 100 percent of dieters involved in the study
Even mild dehydration slows down your metabolism by 3 percent.

Kidney stones are another manifestation of congestion. There are different kinds of stones depending on their composition, which in turn depends on the specific biochemical process that is off-balance.

Stones begin as tiny crystals and can eventually become as large as an egg. The tiny crystals are too small to be detected by X-rays, and since they do not cause pain, they are rarely noticed. Yet they are big enough to block the flow of liquid through the tiny kidney tubules. Crystals or stones are formed in the kidneys when urinary constituents, which are normally in solution, are precipitated. Precipitation occurs when these particles occur in excessive amounts or when urine becomes too concentrated. Most crystals or stones originate in the kidneys, although some may also be formed in the bladder.

If a large stone enters one of the two ureters, urinary discharge becomes obstructed. This can lead to serious complications such as kidney infection or failure. Regardless of where in the kidneys the blockage occurs, it restricts their ability to remove and regulate water and chemicals, causing these delicate organs to suffer injury.

Some studies claim that kidney stones bring around 2 million individuals to a doctor's clinic every year. According to these studies, obese women have a 90 percent higher risk of developing kidney stones than women who are not obese. Obese men have a 33 percent higher risk.

Some researchers believe that abnormal accumulation of fat tissue induces insulin resistance, causing changes to the urine that favor the growth of kidney stones.

Others believe that another reason why obese individuals are prone to developing kidney stones is the over-consumption of soft drinks and colas. Soft drinks are highly acidic and have radical mineral imbalances. To counterbalance this and restore the body's pH level, the kidneys draw calcium from the bones and other tissues. Excess levels of calcium in the kidneys promote the development of stones in these organs.

Cutting soft drinks out of your diet is one of the biggest favors you can do yourself. This includes sports drinks or 'energy drinks', which according to a study by the University of Californian in Berkeley can raise body weight by a stunning 13 pounds a year if only one 20-ounce bottle is consumed every day.

Another study, conducted at Boston University School of Medicine, shows that drinking as little as one can of soda per day - regular or diet - is associated with a 46 percent increased risk of metabolic syndrome, which plays a major role in heart disease, diabetes and obesity.

According to the study, other harmful side effects of soda, both diet and regular, include:

A 31 percent greater risk of becoming obese
A 30 percent higher risk of having a larger waistline
A 25 percent higher risk of developing high blood triglycerides or high blood sugar
A 32 percent greater risk of having low levels of good cholesterol
An increased risk of high blood pressure

[This is an excerpt from the book 'Feel Great, Lose Weight' by Andreas Moritz]

Andreas Moritz is a writer and practitioner in the field of Integrative Medicine. He is the author of 13 books ( http://www.ener-chi.com/book.htm ) on various subjects pertaining to holistic health, including The Amazing Liver and Gallbladder Flush, Timeless Secrets of Health and Rejuvenation and Cancer Is Not a Disease.

His most recent book is titled 'Vaccine-Nation: Poisoning the Population, One Shot at a Time'. Moritz is also the creator of Ener-Chi Art and Sacred Santmony. Much of his life's work has been dedicated to understanding and treating the root causes of illness, and helping the body, mind, spirit and heart to heal naturally.

Connect with Andreas at: http://www.facebook.com/enerchi.wellness

Copyright  2011 by Andreas Moritz

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