PSA: Foamy urine is not normal. If your urine is foamy, notify your doctor.
I have a rare kidney disease. From stages 1 - 3, the only visible symptom was bubbles in my urine -- when I first got sick, my urine looked like beer foam. I got progressively weaker, fatigued, lost hair, memory loss, had high cholesterol, etc. My doctor called me a hypochondriac.
When I got to Stage 4, where I was literally on the verge of kidney failure, I started swelling and having other serious visible signs, so my doctor finally took me seriously.
I wish I had known that foamy urine is not normal. I would have told my doctor early on, and I never have gotten so sick. I wish my doctor had bothered to ask me if my urine was bubbly in any of my check-ups before he called me a hypochondriac.
Also, before people freak out about foamy urine, they should learn the difference between bubbles and foam.
What Normal Urine Looks Like
Normal urine is clear, with a yellowish hue, explains Dr. Ghossein, with no >blood or foam. But foam is different from bubbles, she says.
“Bubbles are bigger, clear and flushable,” Dr. Ghossein explains, noting that >everyone will have bubbles in the toilet after urinating. Foam, on the other >hand, is white, and it stays in the toilet after you flush.
This is a UK Kidney Research which claims men should drink at least 33 fluid ounces of water a day (10 200 ml glasses of water). The folk advice in the US was 8 glasses of water a day when I was growing up.
Drink enough that you have mostly clear urine and ingest plenty of salt.
Thank you for pointing out that there is a definite difference between air bubbles versus the foam that is created when there are things in your urine that are not supposed there. If your urine looks like a draft beer, see a doctor.
As a FYI, my foam never stayed in the toilet after it was flushed.
I'm not excusing him but I understand. If most of your customers are hypochondriacs then you tend to make assumptions in the absence of evidence or asking the right questions.
Yes, I said customers instead of patients. The medical field makes a lot more sense now.
I would argue that doctors are trained to ignore symptoms of diseases at early stages -- when they are easily cured via natural remedies -- and only diagnose disease once it has gotten to the point of chronic disease, where you will need their drugs daily and doctor visits/lab tests monthly. If they diagnose early, they would put themselves out of business.
I developed kidney disease after taking prescribed ibuprofen at his amounts (2400 mg a day) and also being administered a number of MRI' s and a CATscan with dye. The dyes are deadly. But I cured the kidney disease with supplements and a kidney tea. Alternative medicine.
Tylenol will destroy the liver too. I remember in the 1990s, they came out with Tylenol PM and lots of people were popping a bunch before bed just for the drowsy effect. People started having issues after a few years of this ritual.
I also cured (at least mostly cured) my kidney disease via natural remedies. The treatments the doctors offered me had a low success rate and heinous side effects. There was no way I was going to give myself heart problems in the hopes that maybe my kidneys would get better.
Glad you found a cure. As people can have different chemistry going on, toxins, dehydration, or the CATscan dye, one solution might not be for all. What you shared is definitely encouraging! I’ve been working with my functional medicine M.D. who likes supplements that work. Here’s my top 3 ideas for people to consult with their doctor about. 1) DadviceTV, a guy went from stage 4 and improved to stage. On his page under nutrition he recommends Renadyl probiotic to improve creatinine levels. https://www.dadvicetv.com/ 2) Pielotox peptide, available from overseas, as peptides have not caught on yet in the USA. Details: https://www.peptide-bioregulator.com/product/pielotax/ 3). To rehydrate kidneys, , buy organic dried white peaches (they must be organic, no sulfites or sulfides) rehydrate them by soaking in purified warm water and then with extra virgin olive oil, cold pressed and a tiny pinch of organic brown sugar. This might be folklore from my nutritionist, but I do this.
Actually one of the major problems of diabetes is kidney damage. And there are so many people with diabetes in this country that many of them end up on dialysis due to damaged kidneys.
I have three siblings out of 6 of us with type 2 diabetes. All of them took the jabs. Since then two of the older ones are showing higher kidney values. Is it bc of the jabs, who knows? But diabetes is a disease process that causes multiple organ issues.
“One of the main causes of kidney disease is exposure to toxic substances, which Nature says will become more prevalent as a result of climate change.”
Well, this is disturbing. I use Equate flexible bandages on my grandkids A LOT. I usually put neosporin on their injuries after cleansing and before bandaging. I hope the neosporin is creating a barrier to keep the PFAS out of the bloodstream. Damn. I just bought two more econo boxes.
Kidneys have dealt osmotically with man-made toxic crap since the end of WWII with life expectancy only steadily increasing in that period. However goodness only knows what new unchartered strain the 3 year old concoction has made them have to try and flush.
I guess we gotta cover up the previous third leading cause of death somehow. We can't have too many realise medical negligence causes the majority of death and disability worldwide
PSA: Foamy urine is not normal. If your urine is foamy, notify your doctor.
I have a rare kidney disease. From stages 1 - 3, the only visible symptom was bubbles in my urine -- when I first got sick, my urine looked like beer foam. I got progressively weaker, fatigued, lost hair, memory loss, had high cholesterol, etc. My doctor called me a hypochondriac.
When I got to Stage 4, where I was literally on the verge of kidney failure, I started swelling and having other serious visible signs, so my doctor finally took me seriously.
I wish I had known that foamy urine is not normal. I would have told my doctor early on, and I never have gotten so sick. I wish my doctor had bothered to ask me if my urine was bubbly in any of my check-ups before he called me a hypochondriac.
Also, before people freak out about foamy urine, they should learn the difference between bubbles and foam.
What Normal Urine Looks Like
https://www.nm.org/healthbeat/healthy-tips/foamy-urine-whats-normal-whats-not
Drink lots of water, not soda.
This is a UK Kidney Research which claims men should drink at least 33 fluid ounces of water a day (10 200 ml glasses of water). The folk advice in the US was 8 glasses of water a day when I was growing up.
Drink enough that you have mostly clear urine and ingest plenty of salt.
https://www.kidneyresearchuk.org/kidney-health-information/living-with-kidney-disease/how-can-i-help-myself/hydration-for-kidney-health/
Thank you for pointing out that there is a definite difference between air bubbles versus the foam that is created when there are things in your urine that are not supposed there. If your urine looks like a draft beer, see a doctor.
As a FYI, my foam never stayed in the toilet after it was flushed.
Thank you for the information.
I'm not excusing him but I understand. If most of your customers are hypochondriacs then you tend to make assumptions in the absence of evidence or asking the right questions.
Yes, I said customers instead of patients. The medical field makes a lot more sense now.
I would argue that doctors are trained to ignore symptoms of diseases at early stages -- when they are easily cured via natural remedies -- and only diagnose disease once it has gotten to the point of chronic disease, where you will need their drugs daily and doctor visits/lab tests monthly. If they diagnose early, they would put themselves out of business.
Sadly accurate.
Some doctor! There are many like this one, unfortunately.
Believe it or not, he was better than most other doctors I've seen...
I developed kidney disease after taking prescribed ibuprofen at his amounts (2400 mg a day) and also being administered a number of MRI' s and a CATscan with dye. The dyes are deadly. But I cured the kidney disease with supplements and a kidney tea. Alternative medicine.
My coworker had liver failure from ibuprofen.
Tylenol will destroy the liver too. I remember in the 1990s, they came out with Tylenol PM and lots of people were popping a bunch before bed just for the drowsy effect. People started having issues after a few years of this ritual.
I also cured (at least mostly cured) my kidney disease via natural remedies. The treatments the doctors offered me had a low success rate and heinous side effects. There was no way I was going to give myself heart problems in the hopes that maybe my kidneys would get better.
Which supplements/tea?
Would you be so kind as to list your supplements and tea? TY fren.
Glad you found a cure. As people can have different chemistry going on, toxins, dehydration, or the CATscan dye, one solution might not be for all. What you shared is definitely encouraging! I’ve been working with my functional medicine M.D. who likes supplements that work. Here’s my top 3 ideas for people to consult with their doctor about. 1) DadviceTV, a guy went from stage 4 and improved to stage. On his page under nutrition he recommends Renadyl probiotic to improve creatinine levels. https://www.dadvicetv.com/ 2) Pielotox peptide, available from overseas, as peptides have not caught on yet in the USA. Details: https://www.peptide-bioregulator.com/product/pielotax/ 3). To rehydrate kidneys, , buy organic dried white peaches (they must be organic, no sulfites or sulfides) rehydrate them by soaking in purified warm water and then with extra virgin olive oil, cold pressed and a tiny pinch of organic brown sugar. This might be folklore from my nutritionist, but I do this.
Actually one of the major problems of diabetes is kidney damage. And there are so many people with diabetes in this country that many of them end up on dialysis due to damaged kidneys.
I have three siblings out of 6 of us with type 2 diabetes. All of them took the jabs. Since then two of the older ones are showing higher kidney values. Is it bc of the jabs, who knows? But diabetes is a disease process that causes multiple organ issues.
“One of the main causes of kidney disease is exposure to toxic substances, which Nature says will become more prevalent as a result of climate change.”
Toxic substances????
Yes, like Band Aids and Curad bandages and apparently period underwear (gotta protect the environment by not filling up landfills with period products!)
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-13268155/Forever-chemicals-bandages-period-underwear.html
Well, this is disturbing. I use Equate flexible bandages on my grandkids A LOT. I usually put neosporin on their injuries after cleansing and before bandaging. I hope the neosporin is creating a barrier to keep the PFAS out of the bloodstream. Damn. I just bought two more econo boxes.
Band Aids have been around a ver Ling time. This never happened before.
I know, right?
The Standard American Diet hurts our bodies. It is a contributor if not the major cause of people getting many diseases including this one.
I know Remdesivere does this
I was going to ask, after reading the post title, are these the same people who were given the kidney-killer, Remdesivir?
Chronic high BP can also damage the kidneys.
And high BP is another common effect of the jabs.
Kidneys have dealt osmotically with man-made toxic crap since the end of WWII with life expectancy only steadily increasing in that period. However goodness only knows what new unchartered strain the 3 year old concoction has made them have to try and flush.
To paraphrase: It’s because of climate change and us poisoning you with toxic food and chemicals. Trust us to fix climate change for you.
I guess we gotta cover up the previous third leading cause of death somehow. We can't have too many realise medical negligence causes the majority of death and disability worldwide