Bedwetting Articles about
Bedwetting
Website Links For
Bedwetting
 

Information About

Bedwetting




  ICD10 ,
  ICD9


Bedwetting (or '''nocturnal enuresis''' or '''sleepwetting''') is involuntary Urination while Asleep after the age at which bladder control would normally be anticipated.

Most children (85-90%) will consistently stay dry by age 6. By age 10, 95% of children are dry at night. Studies place adult bedwetting rates at between 0.5% to 2.3%.

A small percentage (5 to 10%) of bedwetting cases are caused by specific medical situations. Most cases, however, do not have a specific identifiable cause. {Link without Title}

Treatment ranges from Behavioral-based Options to medication. Much of the rationale for treatment revolves around protecting/improving the patient’s self-esteem (Ilyas & Jerkins, 1996). {Link without Title} .

The type of bedwetting depends on whether or not the individual has stayed dry in the past:


USUAL DEVELOPMENTAL PROCESS

Most bedwetting can be described as, "a bothersome alteration in normal development." {Link without Title} The usual development process is:


FREQUENCY OF BEDWETTING (EPIDEMIOLOGY)

Males are more likely to wet the bed than females. Males make up 60% of bed-wetters overall and make up more than 90% of those who wet nightly (Schmitt, 1997).

Doctors frequently consider bedwetting as a self-limiting problem, since most children will grow out of it.

Approximate bedwetting rates are:

Children 5 to 9 years old have a spontaneous cure rate of 14% per year. Adolescents 10 to 18 years old have a spontaneous cure rate of 16% per year.

As can be seen from the numbers above, 5% to 10% of bedwetting children will not outgrow the problem, leaving 0.5% to 1% of adults still dealing with bedwetting. {Link without Title} Individuals who are still enuretic at age 18 are likely to deal with bedwetting throughout their lives. Adult rates of bedwetting show little change due to spontaneous cure.
{Link without Title}

Studies of bedwetting in adults have found varying rates. The most-quoted study in this area was done in the Netherlands. It found a 0.5% rate for 18-64 year olds. A Hong Kong study, however, found a much higher rate. The Hong Kong researchers found a bedwetting rate of 2.3% in 16 to 40 year olds. {Link without Title}


MEDICAL DEFINITIONS (CLINICAL CRITERIA): PRIMARY VS. SECONDARY ENURESIS

The medical name for bedwetting is Nocturnal Enuresis. The condition is divided into two types: Primary Nocturnal Enuresis (PNE) and Secondary Nocturnal Enuresis.

Primary Enuresis
Primary Enuresis occurs when a child is beyond the age at which bladder control would normally be anticipated and:

Some medical definitions list Primary Nocturnal Enuresis (PNE) as a clinical condition at between 4-5 years old. This type of classification is frequently used by insurance companies. It defines PNE as “Persistent bedwetting in the absence of any urologic, medical or neurological anomaly in a child beyond the age when over 75% of children are normally dry.” {Link without Title}

Secondary Enuresis
Secondary Enuresis occurs ''after'' a patient goes through an extended period of dryness at night (approx. 6 months or more) and then ''reverts'' to night-time wetting. Secondary enuresis can be caused by emotional stress or a medical condition, such as a bladder infection. {Link without Title}

U.S. Psychological Definition

Psychologists may use a definition from the American Psychiatric Association’s DSM-IV, defining nocturnal enuresis as repeated urination into bed or clothes, occurring twice per week for at least 3 consecutive months in a child of at least 5 years of age and not due to either a drug side effect or a medical condition. Even if the case does not meet this criteria, the DSM-IV definition allows psychologists to diagnose nocturnal enuresis if the wetting causes the patient clinically significant distress. {Link without Title}

Other Definitions

Other definitions cast themselves as more “practical” guidance, saying that bedwetting can be considered a "clinical problem" if the child is unable to keep the bed dry by age seven. {Link without Title}

D'Alessandro refines this to bedwetting more than 2x/month after the age:


WHEN TREATMENT IS RECOMMENDED

Doctors consider medical evaluation/intervention when:

Only a small percentage of bedwetting is caused by the first two items (see below). Most treatment is covered under the third, with physicians being concerned about the child's ''emotional'' welfare.

Parents become concerned much earier than doctors. A study in 1980 asked parents and physicians the age that children should stay dry at night. The average responses were:


NORMAL PROCESSES OF STAYING DRY (REGULATION IN THE ORGANISM)

Children usually achieve nighttime dryness by developing one or both of two abilities. There appear to be some hereditary factors in how and when these develop.




CAUSES OF BEDWETTING

Only a small percentage of bedwetting is caused by an infection, physical abnormality, or other specifically identifiable cause.
















PSYCHOLOGICAL-SOCIAL IMPACT

A review of medical literature shows doctors consistently stressing that a bedwetting child is not at fault for the situation. Many medical studies state that the psychological impacts of bedwetting are more important than the physical considerations. “It is often the child's and family member's reaction to bedwetting that determines whether it is a problem or not.” {Link without Title}

Studies show that bedwetting children are more likely to have behavioral problems. For children with developmental problems, both the behavioral problems and the bedwetting are frequently part of the developmental issues. For bedwetting children without other developmental issues, these behavioral issues can result from self-esteem issues and stress caused by the wetting. {Link without Title}

Psycholgists report that the amount of psychological harm depends on whether the bedwetting harms self-esteem or development of social skills. Key factors are: {Link without Title}


Psychological theory through the 1960s placed much greater focus on the possibility that a bedwetting child might be acting out, purposefully striking back against parents by soiling linens and bedding. More recent research and medical literature states that this is very rare.

Medical literature states and studies show that punishing or shaming a child for bedwetting will frequently make the situation worse. Doctors describe a downward cycle where a child punished for bedwetting feels shame and a loss of self-confidence. This can cause increased bedwetting incidents, leading to more punishment/shaming, “an escalating cycle of wetting accidents and shame.” {Link without Title}

In the United States, about 35% of enuretic children are punished for wetting the bed. In Hong Kong, 57% of enuretic children are punished for wetting. [http://www.hkjpaed.org/details.asp?id=85&show=1234

Parents with only a grade-school level education punish bed-wetting children at twice the rate of high school- and college-educated parents. {Link without Title}

Parents and family members are frequently stressed by a child’s bedwetting. Soiled linens and clothing cause additional laundry. Wetting episodes can cause lost sleep if the child wakes and/or cries, waking the parents. A European study estimated that a family with a child who wets nightly will pay about $1,000 a year for additional laundry, extra sheets, disposable absorbent garments such as diapers, and mattress replacement. {Link without Title}

Despite these stressful effects, doctors emphasize that parents should react patiently and supportively. {Link without Title}

Bedwetting children feel effects ranging from feeling cold on waking, being teased by siblings, being punished by parents, and being afraid that friends will find out. Whether bedwetting causes low self-esteem remains a subject of debate, but several studies have found that self-esteem improved with management of the condition. {Link without Title}

Children questioned in one study ranked bedwetting as the third most stressful life event, after parental divorce and parental fighting. Adolescents in the same study ranked bedwetting as tied for second with parental fighting. {Link without Title}


TREATMENT


Tricyclic Antidepressant Prescription Drug s with Anti-muscarinic properties (i.e. Amitriptyline , Imipramine or Nortriptyline ) may be used to treat bedwetting with much success for periods up to 3 months.

Another medication, Desmopressin , is a synthetic replacement for the missing burst of Antidiuretic Hormone . Desmopressin is usually used in the form of Desmopressin acetate, DDAVP. Whether used daily or occasionally, DDAVP simply replaces the hormone for that night with no cumulative effect.

Some psychologists and experts recommend the use of night-time training devices such as a Bedwetting Alarm to help Condition the child first to wake up at the sensation of moisture and then at the sensation of a full Bladder . Success with alarms is increased and relapses reduced when combined in programs which may include bladder muscle exercises, dietary changes, mental imagery, stress reduction, and other supportive activities.

Diaper s can reduce the embarrassment and mess of wetting incidents. Diaper sizes for enuresis cover individuals from 38 lbs (17 kg) through adult sizes. Some research, however, inidcates that extended use of diapers can interfere with learning to stay dry. {Link without Title}

Experts generally agree that parents' understanding that sleepwetting is not the child’s fault strongly increases the child's willingness to help deal with it. Although historically, physical punishment such as spanking was the normal method of incentivizing older children to stop sleep wetting, anti-spanking advocates have discouraged any corporal punishment for this purpose. Punishments including restrictions, teasing, or shaming, whether actual or threatened, are counterproductive. Encouragement of self reliance allows for the child's own natural and native development to acquire the ability to sleep dry on his or her own terms.


SEE ALSO



EXTERNAL LINKS



REFERENCES