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YOUR BLADDER WILL CALM DOWN! Stop Waking Up to Pee at Night If You Do THIS…

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Every single night, 50 million Americans

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wake up to use the bathroom. Not once,

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but two, three, sometimes five times.

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And here is what nobody is telling you

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at your doctor's appointment. In 80% of

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those cases, your bladder is completely

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healthy. It isn't the problem. And the

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pills, the supplements, the herbs you've

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been taking for your prostate or your

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bladder, they're aimed at the wrong

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organ entirely. Subscribe to Dr. Watling

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right now and hit that like button. It

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takes 5 seconds. We're working toward

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1,000 subscribers and we're building

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this channel on one principle. The

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system makes money when you stay sick,

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not when you get better. What I'm about

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to tell you, nobody in a clinic waiting

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room is going to say. 3:00 in the

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morning, your apartment is completely

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still. You finally sank into that deep,

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heavy sleep, the good kind. And then,

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the signal comes. Faint at first,

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somewhere at the edge of your awareness.

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You try to roll over. You try to think

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about something else, but the pressure

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builds. You throw back the covers, drop

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your feet onto the cold floor, and

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shuffle to the bathroom like a zombie.

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You squint against the light. You do

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what you came to do. You come back to

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bed and sleep is gone. Your mind is

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running. Work, the mortgage, the kids.

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You lie there for an hour. You finally

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drift off and it happens again. Second

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time tonight, you wake up in the morning

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shattered, heavy-headed, and you pour

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coffee into yourself all day just to

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function. I see this in the eyes of

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hundreds of patients who walk into my

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practice. And almost every one of them

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says the same thing. Doc, what can you

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do? It's just age. Everybody gets up at

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night. Let me be direct with you. That

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is a lie. It is a dangerous illusion and

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it needs to be shattered right now.

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Getting up at night to urinate is not

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normal. Not at 40, not at 50, not at 70.

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A healthy body is built differently. At

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night, your brain produces a specific

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hormone called antidiuretic hormone,

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also called vasopressin. Think of it as

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a factory

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manager sending a memo to your kidneys.

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Stop. Night shift. Concentrate the

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urine, reduce the volume, run in economy

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mode. That mechanism is precisely what

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allows a healthy person to sleep 7 or 8

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hours straight without a single

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interruption. When that mechanism breaks

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down, it is not a minor inconvenience.

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In medicine, the condition is called

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nocturia, which simply means urinating

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repeatedly during the night. And it is a

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diagnosis. If you get up once a night,

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that is a warning signal. If you get up

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twice or more, that is an alarm going

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off. Because

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every single time you wake up, your

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pulse jumps, your blood pressure spikes,

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and you interrupt the phase of deep

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sleep. The phase in which your brain

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clears out metabolic waste products,

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neurons repair themselves, and your

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heart genuinely rests. Years of losing

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this phase is a direct path to

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hypertension, depression, and

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accelerated brain aging. Clinical

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research shows that nocturia stresses

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the cardiovascular system faster than

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smoking. That is not an exaggeration.

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That is data from published clinical

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studies. Now, here is the most important

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thing I want you to hear right now. When

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patients come to me with this complaint,

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most have already decided they know the

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cause. Men say, "Doctor, it's my

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prostate. I'm sure of it." Women say,

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"It's menopause, prolapse, chronic

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bladder infection." They've been

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drinking diuretic herbal teas, taking

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antibiotics, buying advertised

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supplements for urological health.

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They've been restricting their water

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intake so aggressively that their mouth

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goes dry by evening. They stop drinking

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tea after 6:00. They go to bed parched

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and they still get up at 3:00 in the

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morning. Why? Because they're fighting

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the symptom, not the cause. Let me

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explain this with a simple model.

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Imagine your home's fire alarm goes off

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in the middle of the night. What do most

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people do? They cover the sensor with

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tape so it stops making noise. The

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correct response is to find where the

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fire is. That is exactly how most people

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treat their nighttime bathroom trips.

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Your bladder is the sensor. It is simply

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signaling that something is happening

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somewhere else in the body. In 80% of

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cases, the bladder is perfectly healthy.

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It is doing exactly what it is supposed

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to do, emptying what gets put into it.

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The problem is not the reservoir. The

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problem is who is filling it during the

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night and why. And the answer to that

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question may genuinely shock you. The

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culprit is your legs and your heart. But

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before we get to the mechanism, I need

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to say something as a physician with 15

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years of clinical experience. There are

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symptoms that should send you straight

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to a doctor, not to a video. Know these.

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First, blood in your urine without pain.

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Remember that combination. If there is

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pain and blood, it is most likely a

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kidney stone or acute bladder infection.

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Miserable, but not immediately

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life-threatening. But if you see dark

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red or brown urine, blood clots in the

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toilet bowl, and nothing hurts, that is

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one of the most serious early signs of

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bladder cancer. In men and women over

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50, that finding is a direct indication

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for cystoscopy, a procedure where a

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doctor looks inside the bladder with a

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small camera. Do not wait. Second, bone

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pain combined with sudden weight loss.

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If your nighttime trips are accompanied

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by aching in your pelvis or lower back,

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and you have lost 10 to 20 lb over 2

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months without dieting, that pattern is

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a warning for

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If none of those apply to you, you can

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breathe. You are going to be fine. But

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the quality of that life is worth

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protecting. And to do that, we need to

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understand exactly malfunction is

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happening in your system. In urology,

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nighttime urinary problems divide into

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three fundamentally different types. The

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treatment for each is different and what

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helps one type can actively make another

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worse. Type one is global polyuria. That

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is producing too much urine overall. You

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are going frequently both day and night

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and each time the volume is large. If

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you collected everything you produced in

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24 hours, you would measure 3 to 4 L.

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There are usually two causes. First, you

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are simply drinking enormous amounts of

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fluid. Walking around all day with a

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water bottle, thinking more is always

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better. The physics is simple. Whatever

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goes in must come out. Second cause is

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diabetes, either type two diabetes where

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glucose pulls water with it, or central

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diabetes insipidus, which involves a

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hormone disruption in the brain. Urine

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in this type is usually pale, nearly

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odorless, and you go just as often

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during the day as at night. This type

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needs an endocrinologist and a blood

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sugar test. Type two is nocturnal

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polyuria, the most insidious type and

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the one found in 60 to 70% of people

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over 50. The picture looks like this.

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During the day, you live completely

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normally. You work, you run errands, you

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visit the bathroom every 4 or 5 hours.

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Nothing hurts, nothing burns. But the

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moment you lie down, the nightmare

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begins. Three or four trips per night,

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each time a full bladder, large volume.

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In the morning, you look and you

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genuinely cannot figure it out. You had

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half a glass of kefir last night. Where

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did 1 and 1/2 L of fluid come from? This

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is classic nocturnal polyuria. Your

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kidneys have switched their filtration

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activity to nighttime hours. They run at

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half capacity during and at 200% at

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night. We will unpack why in detail in a

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moment. The critical point, if this is

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your type, the bladder has nothing to do

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with it. Treating the bladder is

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useless. Type three is a reservoir

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problem. Here, it is the opposite. Urges

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are frequent, sudden, and urgent. It

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