What disease does women's urine cure? Explore the controversy and science behind urine therapy
In recent years, discussions about "urine therapy" have once again sparked heated discussions on the Internet. Despite the caution of modern medicine, some people still believe that urine has the power to treat certain diseases. This article will analyze the controversy and scientific basis of this phenomenon based on hot topics and structured data in the past 10 days.
1. Topics related to urine therapy that are hotly discussed on the Internet

| Topic keywords | Search volume (last 10 days) | Main discussion platform |
|---|---|---|
| urine therapy | 12,500+ | Weibo, Zhihu |
| Effects of women's urine | 8,300+ | Baidu Tieba, Douyin |
| Urine treats skin diseases | 5,700+ | Xiaohongshu, Bilibili |
| The scientific basis for urine therapy | 3,900+ | Zhihu, WeChat public accounts |
2. History and folk applications of urine therapy
Urine Therapy is not a modern product, its history can be traced back to the traditional medicine of ancient India and China. Proponents believe urine contains antibodies, hormones and minerals that may help with certain diseases. Here are the ailments that folklore says urine may cure:
| disease type | claimed efficacy | Usage |
|---|---|---|
| Skin problems (such as eczema, acne) | Anti-inflammation and sterilization | External application |
| eye infection | Relieve redness and swelling | Rinse after dilution |
| Oral ulcers | speed up healing | gargle |
| immune system diseases | Regulate immunity | Take internally |
3. Views and risk warnings from the scientific community
Despite many popular opinions, the mainstream medical community has a negative attitude towards urine therapy. The following is an analysis from a scientific perspective:
1.Urine composition analysis: 95% of the urine of healthy people is water, and the rest is metabolic waste such as urea and inorganic salts. It has no special therapeutic ingredients.
2.Potential risks: Urine may carry bacteria or viruses, and internal use or external application may cause infection; long-term use may increase the burden on the kidneys.
3.alternative: For diseases claimed to be effective, modern medicine has safer and more reliable treatments.
4. Recent Internet Controversies
In the past 10 days, a blogger on the Douyin platform shared a video of "Morning Urine Applying Facial Beauty Method" and received 500,000 views, triggering polarizing comments:
| Supporters' point of view | Opposition point of view | Medical institutions respond |
|---|---|---|
| "Recipes handed down from our grandmothers" | “No scientific basis” | The Chinese Medical Doctor Association issued a warning: It may damage the skin barrier |
| “Personal experience works” | 'There is a health risk' |
5. Suggestions on treating traditional therapies rationally
1. For any folk remedies, priority should be given to consulting a professional physician
2. Be wary of commercial promotions that exaggerate the efficacy. An e-commerce platform recently removed a product that was advertised as a “urine therapy tool.”
3. Pay attention to popular science content from authoritative medical institutions, such as "Can Urine Really Cure Diseases" published by the "Healthy China" public account? 》Reading volume exceeded 100,000+
4. Scientific diet and rest are the foundation of health, there is no need to rely on special treatments
Conclusion
Despite the buzz online, there is currently no reliable evidence to support the therapeutic benefits of urine. When dealing with health problems, it is recommended to follow the guidance of modern medicine and avoid blindly trying potentially harmful folk remedies. If you try alternative treatments, always do so under professional supervision.
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