If you can’t hold your urine, the first thing to look at is when it happens to the patient. If it occurs for a short time, it is most likely to be a urinary tract infection. When urinary tract infection occurs, the patient will have frequent urination, urgent urination, painful urination, a small feeling of fullness, and always want to urinate. This situation of doing urine routine, giving patients anti-inflammatory drugs will be able to improve, is a curable disease, clinically not harmful. However, if the patient has been experiencing small abdominal distension and a feeling of holding urine for a long time, it is important to check whether there is a problem with bladder function or if the patient has an enlarged or enlarged prostate gland, which causes poor urination. It is important to combine this with the patient’s ultrasound and, if necessary, bladder dynamics to give a clear diagnosis. See if there are any related diseases and give the patient related sexual treatment. For example, if there is a problem with the prostate gland and it does not improve with medication, surgical treatment can be used. Some tumors of the bladder can cause similar symptoms, and some other diseases of the abdominal organs can also cause similar symptoms. For example, fluid in the abdominal cavity, intestinal obstruction of the intestinal canal and other factors, and occupancy, can irritate the abdomen and manifest a feeling of abdominal distension and discomfort. But it is not a problem with the bladder, it is a problem with the abdominal organs, and the relevant differential diagnosis needs to be made.