How To Permanently Stop Bedwetting

How To Permanently Stop Bedwetting

Enuresis (EN-yur-EE-sis) is the medical term for bed-wetting during sleep. Bed-wetting is fairly common among children, and is often just a stage in their development. It is more common in boys than girls. Many children grow out of it without treatment. You may want to consider treatment if bed-wetting occurs after age five, although medicines are typically not used until age seven.


What causes bed-wetting?


Bed-wetting is not a mental or behavioral problem. It doesn’t happen because the child is too lazy to get out of bed to go to the bathroom. Children should not be punished for bed-wetting. There are many medical conditions that can cause bed-wetting, although the cause is not always obvious.


Your doctor may do tests if he or she thinks your child has one of these conditions:


• Constipation

• Diabetes

• Urinary tract infection

• Problems in the urethral valves in boys or in the ureters in girls or boys (urethral valves help direct urine out of the bladder; ureters are tubes that bring urine from the kidneys to the bladder)

• Problems in the spinal cord


When do most children learn bladder control?


Children learn to control their bladder at different ages. Most children do not wet the bed after age five. Bed-wetting in children younger than five years is not unusual, even though it may be frustrating to parents.


How can my doctor help?


Although most children who wet the bed are healthy, your doctor can find out if the bed-wetting is caused by a medical problem. First, your doctor will ask about your child’s daytime and nighttime bathroom habits. Then, your doctor will do an exam and test your child’s urine to check for infection or diabetes.


Your doctor may ask about how things are going at home and at school for your child. He or she will also ask about your family life, because treatment may depend on changes at home.


How do you treat bed-wetting?


Most children outgrow bed-wetting without treatment. However, you and your doctor may decide your child needs treatment. There are two kinds of treatment: behavioral therapy and medicine. Behavioral therapy helps teach your child not to wet the bed. Some behavioral treatments include:


• Limiting fluids before bedtime

• Avoiding drinks with caffeine, like colas and tea

• Having your child use the bathroom at regular intervals during the day

• Ensuring a calm bedtime routine; have your child go to the bathroom at the start of the bedtime routine and then again right before going to sleep

• Using an alarm system that rings when the bed gets wet and teaches the child to respond to bladder fullness at night

• Asking your child to change the bed sheets when he or she wets

• Creating a reward system for certain behaviors, like a having a dry night, changing the sheets after bed-wetting, and waking to the alarm and then urinating

• Bladder training: have your child practice holding his or her urine for longer and longer times during the day, in an effort to stretch the bladder so it can hold more urine.


What should I know about alarm systems?


Alarm systems (bed alarms) are the best treatment for bed-wetting, but can take time and work. There are many different kinds of bed alarms, but none has been shown to be better than others. Most health insurance companies will not pay for these alarms. The goal of alarm therapy is for your child’s body to learn when he or she needs to urinate, to then wake up, hold his or her urine, go to the bathroom, and urinate.


Before starting alarm therapy, you and your child should agree on responsibilities for using the alarm. Ideally, your child should respond to the alarm, turn it off, go to the bathroom to urinate, return to bed, and reset the alarm. However, you may need to help your child wake when the alarm sounds (some children may sleep through the alarm, or may learn to shut off the alarm in their sleep). Alarm therapy is not for every family. It is a big commitment. You should be prepared to use it every night for at least three months, and it may affect your sleep and your child’s sleep.


What kinds of medicines are used to treat bed-wetting?


Your doctor may give your child medicine if he or she is seven years or older, and if behavioral therapy (such as alarm therapy) has not worked. Medicines aren’t a cure for bed-wetting, but may stop it while your child grows and develops to a point where it no longer happens.


The most common medicine used for bed-wetting is desmopressin. It helps the kidneys make less urine. It is a pill usually taken about one hour before going to sleep. It can be used every night or just for nights of important events, such as sleepovers or summer camp.


On the nights your child takes desmopressin, limit his or her fluid intake to less than 6 oz in the evening. Starting one hour before taking desmopressin, your child should not drink anything for eight hours until the morning. If things don’t improve after a few weeks of treatment, your doctor may increase the dose. Desmopressin may be used for several months until you and your doctor decide to stop treatment. If bed-wetting returns, the medicine can be restarted.


How To Permanently Stop Bedwetting

Are X-Rays And Other Tests Needed?

A urinalysis (urine test) should be obtained in children who wet to determine if a urinary tract infection, blood in the urine, or diabetes is contributing to the problem. The urine test is inexpensive and easy to perform. In most cases the urinalysis is normal in kids with bedwetting. If the physical exam and urine test are normal, then further testing is not usually obtained. If the urinalysis is abnormal, further testing may be advised. If treatments for the bedwetting are unsuccessful then further testing may be recommended, realizing that the likelihood of finding a significant birth defect or medical problem is very low. Your child’s doctor will determine what evaluation is best for your child.


Ultrasound pictures of the kidneys and bladder are the most commonly obtained x-rays in children with bedwetting. Obtaining an ultrasound is easy, painless, and relatively inexpensive compared to other x-rays. A child who has had a urinary tract infection should have an ultrasound to determine if the kidneys and bladder are normal.


A bladder ultrasound is valuable in children with daytime potty problems. This will determine if a child completely empties his bladder and if there are any obvious abnormalities of the bladder. X-rays that involve instilling dye through catheters (VCUG = voiding cystourethrogram) or injection of dye into a needle (IVP = intraveneous pyelogram) are used to better image the bladder, kidneys, and ureters (kidney tubes). These tests are more painful and expensive than ultrasound, and should only be performed in children with infections, abnormal ultrasounds, or difficult problems.


Bladder function tests can be performed to determine if the bladder, urethra, and sphincters work normally. A child can urinate into a special potty while having small sensors placed on the buttocks to determine if the stream, flow, and sphincters are normal. A catheter (tube) can be inserted into the bladder to measure how well a child empties, how much the bladder holds, and what pressures are generated by the bladder.


This test is called urodynamics. Urodynamics should only be obtained if one suspects significant abnormal bladder function due to a neurological problem or abnormal potty habits. Children with just bedwetting should not undergo urodynamics in the majority of cases.


Blood testing is not routinely obtained in children who wet. If there are concerns about diabetes or kidney function then blood tests can be useful. It is unlikely that blood tests will help healthy kids who have bedwetting problems.


Children with bedwetting problems are unlikely to have urological (kidney, bladder, and urethra) abnormalities. If your child’s pediatrician or family physician suspects an underlying medical problem exists, then a referral to a specialist may be warranted. Your child’s doctor or the specialist (pediatric urologist, urologist, or pediatric nephrologist) may order additional testing to make sure there are no urologic problems.


As stated previously, birth defects of the urinary system and other medical conditions can cause bedwetting. Because these urologic and medical conditions are rare, x-rays, bladder function tests, and blood work should not be obtained in most children with bedwetting.