![]() I also get white stuff Big and small in my urine as well I drink a lot fluids so am not dehydrated, but I only peed 370ml since 8.30pm and it is now 3.45am. It is really thick and still has the white in or attached. I have had a yellow/brownish Jelly with/out white stings in or attached to the jelly in my urine that blocks my cath for some time now, which I thought it was a lot then but now it is a ridiculous amount and huge, with blood (which the blood maybe put down to the surgery, but have suffered with UTI/Kidney Infection my whole life on and off) but this is blocking my cath and creating a lot of pain when it does until it moves, sometime into the cath but sometimes through my pee the normal way cause it wont pass through the cath and it explodes out the normal way. Hi, I am a 33 years old Female paraplegic, I have just had surgery to have a cystoscopy and have my suprapubic catheter moved due to a lot of leakage of urine from my old site. Hopefully this information is useful to all of you. I did some searching on the internet when I noticed my jelly-like discharge and did not find anything that was particularly useful. I am very thankful my cyst was caught early and removed. While not a fun experience, it is not that big of a deal either. In my case, I'm homebound for ~10 days with a catheter. The doctor will cut out the portion of the bladder around the cyst and will also remove the "urachal remnants" so the subsequent cysts do not form. However, I'd strongly encourage you to see a specialist and get checked out. Cysts are much more likely to be benign in young people, like those who have posted on this forum. These cancers are particularly aggressive, meaning a cyst should be removed if it is found so that a cancer does not form. Urachal cysts are very serious growths and need to be removed surgically because the cysts tend to turn malignant (ie, they tend to turn into cancers) and form a urachal cancer. If not, I'd suggest seeing a different urologist. A urologist, however, should know what it is. As a result, primary care physicians and other medical professionals may not have even heard of it (my primary care doctor had not heard of it), much less have any idea how to diagnose it. Keep in mind that a urachal cyst is a very, very rare condition. However, if you've been to a primary care doctor and he/she ruled out other possibilities (e.g., a urinary tract infection or an STD), I encourage you to visit a urologist. Now, I'm there are other conditions that could result in jelly being passed in urine. Subsequent pathology confirmed the cyst was benign and had not turned into cancer. The surgery was performed using the da Vinci, a minimally invasive robotic surgery system. I then had the cyst removed laparascopically. I then went for a CT to determine the size of the cyst. A urologist first found the cyst during a cystoscopy. My particular cyst was draining through the bladder, giving the jelly-like discharge in my urine. These cysts may drain either through the belly button or into the bladder, although that symptom is not always present. These rare cysts generally can form between the urachus (a specific part of the bladder) and the the umbilicus (your innards underneath your belly button). Doctors very recently diagnosed me with a urachal cyst. The jelly did not always come out at the beginning or the end of my urine stream, but rather came out at seemingly random times. It ranged in color from clear to a reddish-brown. The material was denser than water, as it sunk to the bottom of the water in the toilet. I was passing a jelly-like substance in my urine, but had no pain. I am a 28 year old male who had a symptom similar to that described by the 19 year old female, although I was not feeling physically sick. ![]()
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