If excessive nighttime urination is the result of a disease such as chronic interstitial nephritis or overactive bladder disease, medications such as ramipril, cloxartan, oxybutynin, and mirabilon are needed. If it is due to excessive drinking before bedtime, no medication is needed.
To determine what medication to take for excessive urination at night, it is necessary to depend on the actual situation, and can not be generalized, and there is a significant difference in the use of medication.
If night urination is caused by chronic interstitial nephritis, the patient needs to follow the doctor’s instructions to apply ramipril, enalapril, lynopril and other angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors, as well as chlorosartan, irbesartan and other angiotensin II receptor antagonists.
In the case of overactive bladder syndrome, patients need to follow medical advice to apply M-blockers such as oxybutynin and solifenacin, as well as β3-adrenergic receptor agonists such as mirabolone and ritobolone.
It is important to note that excessive nighttime urination can also be caused by drinking too much water before going to bed, which usually does not require medication and is a normal physiological phenomenon.
There are many reasons for excessive urination at night, so you should go to the hospital to get a clear picture of the cause and actively treat the primary disease.
All of the above medications should be used in accordance with medical advice.