Does your URINE come out weakly? Scientists reveal why it's all to do with where you work
- Sitting too long can increase your chance of developing urinary tract problems
- A new study found 10 hours sitting lead to a 16% increase in urinary problems
- The study from a South Korean hospital was published in BJU International
- Lower urinary tract symptoms include frequent urinating and incontinence
Sitting for too long could increase your chance of developing urinary problems, says a new study.
Sitting for more than 10 hours could make you 16 per cent more likely to experience problems urinating, according to South Korean researchers.
These problems could include urinating more frequently, a lower flow stream and mild incontinence - collectively known as lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS).
Sitting for too long can increase your chance of developing urinary tract problems
Researchers at at the Kangbuk Samsung Hospital in Seoul aren't sure why this happens but say sitting may affect blood supply to the pelvis.
The dangers of sitting still
While the dangers of not exercising enough have been long established - having been linked to obesity, diabetes, heart problems, cancer and early mortality - they have not been connected with LUTS before.
Looking at answers from a questionnaire of 69,795 Korean men, the researchers compared sitting down times with self-reported urinary problems.
The men's health was then followed over an average of two and half years.
Besides their questionnaire, blood samples and BMI measurement were used to determine whether fitness, blood chemistry, obesity or age had anything to do with developing LUTS.
The researchers found the more time participants spent sitting, the more likely they were to develop urinary problems.
Younger and fitter men were less likely to develop the symptoms, however.
'The results support the importance of both reducing sitting time and promoting physical activity for preventing LUTS,' the study's lead author, Dr Heung Jae Park, said.
Sitting for more than 10 hours could make you 16 per cent more likely to experience problems urinating, according to research published in the journal BJU International (Image from stock)
Bloody supply to the pelvis
The researchers, who published their findings in the BJU International, say they don't know why this is the case.
They suggest sitting can result in a 'unique physiological milieu' in the pelvic area and lower urinary tract, and that this may lead to lower blood supply and to LUTS.
They also believe a build up of plaque in the blood vessels may be a factor in developing LUTS.
However, Dr Seungho Ryu, a senior author on the study added that further research is needed to determine exactly why sitting down for too long can boost the risk of LUTS.
Most watched News videos
- New video shows Epstein laughing and chasing young women
- Epstein describes himself as a 'tier one' sexual predator
- Buddhist monks in Thailand caught with a stash of porn
- Sarah Ferguson 'took Princesses' to see Epstein after prison
- Jenna Bush Hager in tears over disappearance of Nancy Guthrie
- Skier dressed as Chewbacca brutally beaten in mass brawl
- Forth Bridge fireball fall into village streets
- China unveils 'Star Wars' warship that can deploy unmanned jets
- Inside London's terrifying crimewave as gangs target high end stores
- Amazon driver's furious rant about deliveries captured on ring camera
- British Airways passengers turn flight into a church service
- Shock footage of civil unrest in remote community of Wadeye
