Most of the reasons for a patient’s recent symptoms of frequent urination are due to increased urge to urinate due to psychological factors, such as recent work stress, frequent late nights, alcohol consumption or cold. If the patient’s symptoms can be relieved after sleep, consider the psychological effect to be more significant. If the patient’s urine routine examination reveals elevated white blood cells, it may be due to a urinary tract infection. For young women or groups who have recently had sex more frequently, it is important to consider urinary tract infections as a factor causing frequent urination. A confirmed diagnosis can be treated symptomatically with oral antibiotics, and the symptoms will usually be relieved in 3-5 days. There are also cases in view of urethritis and cystitis, which require ultrasound examination of the urinary system or even cystoscopy to confirm the diagnosis. Some cases are gynecological inflammation in women, such as vaginitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, pelvic effusion can also stimulate the urinary system to produce symptoms of frequent urination, but the specific examination of the urinary system does not have positive findings and requires a specialized gynecological examination. There are also men who have chronic prostatitis, and because they don’t pay attention to their usual habits, a sudden acute attack can also cause symptoms of frequent urination, and this situation needs to be specifically investigated.