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Understand Your Symptoms - interstitial cystitis (IC) is a long-term, yet treatable inflammatory condition of the bladder wall. Inside the bladder there is a mucous layer that lines and protects the bladder wall. When someone has IC, it is believed that the mucous layer is damaged. This allows irritating substances in the urine to aggravate and inflame the bladder wall.
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The symptoms of IC are not
the same for every person who has this disorder. Not only
can symptoms of IC vary from person to person, but the same
individual may experience different symptoms, over time. Some
of the more common symptoms a person with IC may experience
are listed here. Whether you notice one, two or all of these
symptoms, you should ask a healthcare professional to evaluate
you for possible IC.
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WOMEN
- You feel unexplained pain or pressure in the pelvic area
- You feel pain during or after sexual intercourse
- You have frequent, sometimes painful urination (Normally, people urinate an average of 6 to 7 times per day. Patients with IC urinate an average of 16 times per day, and some urinate as often as 60 times per day.)
- You wake at night to urinate
- You may feel the urge to urinate, sometimes even after you've emptied your bladder
- You have symptoms like a urinary tract infection (UTI) or are diagnosed with more than two UTIs per year
- Your symptoms come and go—flare-ups may be associated with menstruation, certain foods, allergies, and stress
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MEN
- You feel unexplained pain or pressure in your penis, testes, and/or scrotum, the area above the pubic bone, the lower abdomen, the lower back, or the groin area including testicular pain, in any combination
- You have pain when you ejaculate or a day after ejaculation
- You have frequent, sometimes painful urination (Normally, people urinate an average of 6 to 7 times per day. Patients with IC urinate an average of 16 times per day, and some urinate as often as 60 times per day.)
- You wake more at night to urinate
- You may feel the urge to urinate, sometimes even after you've emptied your bladder
- Your symptoms come and go—flare-ups may be associated with certain foods, allergies, and stress
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