(1) Potty training is teaching your toddler to gain control of their urine and bowel movements.
(2) The urine is stored in your bladder, which can expand to accommodate the increasing volume.
(3) Forensic analysis of urine , blood and hair revealed no traces of doping products.
(4) These increase the production of urine , and so help remove excess fluid from the body.
(5) This happens when urine held by the bladder builds up to the point where the bladder can no longer expand.
(6) The driver is then asked to provide a sample of blood or urine for laboratory analysis.
(7) She is not eating much and passing only small amounts of urine as her kidney function is poor.
(8) Infection of the urine causes symptoms of urgency and sometimes leakage of urine .
(9) Catheters are thin flexible tubes which are inserted into the bladder to allow urine to be passed.
(10) Any water that is left over leaves the body with the toxins, through sweat and urine .
(11) Doctors removed a growth from his bladder in 1991 after he began to pass blood in his urine .
(12) To provide a urine sample
(13) You may also be asked to give urine and blood samples for routine laboratory testing.
(14) The kidneys filter and process the blood and excrete the waste products as urine .
(15) Over time your child will be able to hold more urine and recognise when they feel the urge to go, even if they are asleep.
(16) If your test is carried out in the surgery, the blood or urine sample will be sent to a laboratory to be examined.
(17) Make sure that the child is drinking plenty of fluids, as this will reduce the acidity of the urine .
(18) A urine test is easily done, and can be offered concurrently with a pregnancy test.
(19) The streets are littered with pollution and the smell of stale urine lingers in the air.
(20) The blood pressure drops, causing faintness, and the body may start to store urine .