Common Risk Factor For Weak Bladder.
• Aging: ageing and menopause with a weak bladder has a lot to do with strong family history.
• Autoimmune Disorders: condition like diabetes, stroke, perkison or spinal injurie can damage bladder function.
• Lifestyle and Environmental Factors : Smoking, drinking Alcohol, and taking of hash or to many drugs.
• Infections: Certain infections like Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
• Medical Treatments and Surgeries: bladder neck suspension, artifical sphincters and sling procedureÂ
• Cancer Treatments: Radiation Therapy, Prostate surgery, Chemotherapy.
Sisters, let’s talk straight.
Many women in Nigeria, especially those over 35, face big troubles with their body when it comes to making babies and staying healthy down there. You know what I mean – your monthly flow becomes irregular or stops coming properly, you get painful infections that make you uncomfortable, it’s hard to get pregnant even when you try, and you just feel tired and weak all the time. From Lagos to Abuja, and even in our villages, women deal with these problems every day. Things like polycystic ovarian syndrome (that’s when your ovaries have small lumps causing missed monthly flows), infertility that stops you from having more children, sexual health worries, and even high blood pressure during pregnancy.
These issues make life hard – you can’t enjoy time with your husband, family pressures build up, and you worry about not giving birth to that boy or girl you’ve been praying for. It’s common here in Nigeria, where surveys show infertility affects many women, and infections spread easily because of our busy lives.