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A doctor issued a warning about how often you go to the toilet (Image: Getty)
A doctor has issued a warning about going to the toilet, sharing a two-hour rule. According to the expert, relieving yourself too often could be sending the wrong message to your brain.
A medical professional has highlighted a significant concern regarding restroom habits, emphasizing what he refers to as the “two-hour rule.” The expert cautions that frequent bathroom visits might inadvertently send confusing signals to your brain.
Various factors such as dietary intake, caffeine consumption, environmental temperature, and emotional states like stress and anxiety can influence how often you need to urinate daily.
However, there is an often-overlooked consequence of excessive urination: it may have lasting effects on your body’s natural processes.
In a TikTok video, Dr. Suraj Kukadia offered further insights into this issue.
The NHS physician advised on the optimal frequency of bathroom visits, stating, “On average, you should be urinating every two to four hours, maintaining this even if you’re properly hydrated.”
“Your bladder and brain communicate in a feedback loop. Your bladder fills with urine over two to four hours.
He pointed out the potential downside of more frequent trips. “If you’re urinating every hour, you might be conditioning your brain to misfire, which could lead to urge incontinence,” he warned.
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He continued: “And that process is normal. But if you pee every time you feel even a hint of bladder fullness, even at small volumes like 50 or 100 ml, your brain starts learning the wrong pattern.
“You constantly respond to small bladder volumes. Your brain recalibrates. It starts thinking, ‘bladder at 50,200 mil – time to pee’.”
This can result in you being unable to store as much urine. Dr Kukadia, who is better known online as Dr Sooj, said: “Now the urge signal gets stronger, more frequent and more intense.
“Your stress receptors become hypersensitive, and they start firing at lower volumes. Basically false alarms.
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“You are literally rewiring your brain bladder connection to misfire. And this is how you develop urge incontinence.
“The sudden, uncontrollable urge to pee even when your bladder isn’t full and that is a learned pattern.”
Luckily, there are steps you can take to reverse this. Dr Sooj said: “But you can retrain the brain bladder loop. When you feel a strong urge, stop, and stay still.
“Tighten and relax your pelvic floor rapidly, kind of like you’re trying to stop a pee midstream.
“This sends a competing signal to your brain to override the urgency. You are teaching your brain that small bladder volumes do not require immediate emptying.”
If you’re experiencing urinary incontinence
On the NHS website it says you should see a GP if you have any type of urinary incontinence. It says: “Urinary incontinence is a common problem and you should not feel embarrassed talking to them about your symptoms.
“This can also be the first step towards finding a way to effectively manage the problem.”