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We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credit: Source: National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, edited by Dr Stephan A. Zderic (see below). Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.
Children may have a bladder control problem—also called urinary incontinence (UI)—if they leak urine by accident and are past the age of toilet training. A child may not stay dry during the day, called daytime wetting; or through the night, called bedwetting.
Children normally gain control over their bladders somewhere between ages 2 and 4—each in their own time. Occasional wetting is common even in 4- to 6-year-old children.
By age 4, when most children stay dry during the day, daytime wetting can be very upsetting and embarrassing. By ages 5 or 6, children might have a bedwetting problem if the bed is wet once or twice a week over a few months.
Most bladder control problems disappear naturally as children grow older. When needed, a health care professional can check for conditions that may lead to wetting.
Loss of urine is almost never due to laziness, a strong will, emotional problems, or poor toilet training. Parents and caregivers should always approach this problem with understanding and patience.
Children who leak urine after most classmates stay dry may have a bladder control problem. Emotional support, new habits, or treatments may help.
Bladder control problems are also called urinary incontinence or enuresis:
Children usually have one of two main bladder control problems:
Some children may have trouble controlling their bladders both day and night.
For infants and toddlers, wetting is a normal part of development. Children gradually learn to control their bladders as they grow older.
Problems that can occur during this process and lead to daytime wetting include:
Children who wet the bed fall into two groups: those who have never been dry at night, and children who started wetting the bed again after staying dry for 6 months.
Bladder control problems are common in children. About 1 in 10 children has trouble with daytime wetting at age. Nighttime wetting is more common than daytime wetting.
These are some statistics: Age - Bedwetting Numbers
Bedwetting often stops without formal treatment as children grow older.
Daytime wetting is more common in girls than boys.
Bedwetting is more common in boys—and in all children whose parents wet the bed when they were young. Your child’s chances of wetting the bed are about 1 in 3 when one parent was affected as a child. If both parents were affected, the chances that your child will wet the bed are 7 in 10.2
Most children with bladder control problems are physically and emotionally normal.
Certain health conditions can make a child more likely to experience wetting, including:
Children can manage or outgrow most bladder control problems with no lasting health effects. However, accidental wetting can cause emotional distress and poor self-esteem for a child as well as frustration for families.
Bladder control problems can sometimes lead to bladder or kidney infections (UTIs). Bedwetting that is never treated during childhood can last into the teen years and adulthood, causing emotional distress.
Losing urine by accident is the main sign of a bladder control problem. Your child may often have wet or stained underwear—or a wet bed.
Squatting, leg crossing, and heel sitting can be signs of an overactive bladder.
Signs that your child may have a condition that causes daytime wetting include:
Nighttime wetting is normal for many children—and is often not considered a health problem at all—especially when it runs in the family.
At ages 5 and older, signs that your child may have a nighttime bladder control problem—whether due to slow physical development, an illness, or any cause—can include:
Your child’s doctor can suggest when treatments may help control bedwetting.
If you or your child are worried about accidental wetting, talk with a health care professional. He or she can check for medical problems and offer treatment or reassure you that your child is developing normally.
Take your child to a health care professional if there are signs of a medical problem, including:
Although each child is unique, providers often use a child’s age to decide when to look for a bladder control problem. In general:
If your child has symptoms of a bladder or kidney infection, or has a fever without a clear cause, see a health care professional within 24 hours. Quick treatment is important to prevent a urinary tract infection from causing more serious health problems.
Bathroom habits, such as holding urine too long, and slow physical development cause many of the bladder control problems seen in children. Less often, a medical condition can cause wetting.
Daytime wetting in children is commonly caused by holding urine too long, constipation, or bladder systems that don’t work together smoothly. Health problems can sometimes cause daytime wetting, too, such as bladder or kidney infections (UTIs), structural problems in the urinary tract, or nerve problems.
When children hold their urine too long, it can trigger problems in how the bladder works or make existing problems worse.
These bladder problems include:
Bladder muscles squeeze at the wrong time, without warning, causing a loss of urine. Your child may have strong, sudden urges to urinate. She may urinate frequently—8 or more times a day.
Children only empty the bladder a few times a day, with little urge to urinate. Bladder contractions can be weak, and your child may strain when urinating, have a weak stream, or stop-and-go urine flow.
Muscles and nerves of the bladder may not work together smoothly. As the bladder empties, sphincter or pelvic floor muscles may cut off urine flow too soon, before the bladder empties all the way. Urine left in the bladder may leak.
Nighttime wetting is often related to slow physical development, a family history of bedwetting, or making too much urine at night. In many cases, there is more than one cause. Children almost never wet the bed on purpose—and most children who wet the bed are physically and emotionally normal.
Sometimes a health condition can lead to bedwetting, such as diabetes or constipation.
Bedwetting often runs in families, where it is usually a normal growth pattern, not an illness.
Between ages 5 and 10, slow physical development can cause your child to wet the bed. Your child may have a small bladder, deep sleep cycles, or a nervous system that’s still growing and developing. The nervous system handles the body’s alarms—sending signals about a full or emptying bladder—and the need to wake up.
Bedwetting often runs in families. Researchers have found genes that are linked to bedwetting. Genes are parts of the master code that children inherit from each parent for hair colour and many other features and traits.
Your child’s kidneys may make too much urine overnight, leading to an overfull bladder. If your child doesn’t wake up in time, a wet bed is likely. Often this excess urine at night is due to low levels of a natural substance called antidiuretic hormone (ADH). ADH tells the kidneys to release less water at night.
Sleepwalking and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) can lead to bedwetting. With OSA, children breathe poorly and get less oxygen, which triggers the kidneys to make extra urine at night. Bedwetting can be a sign that your child has OSA. Other symptoms include snoring, mouth breathing, ear and sinus infections, a dry mouth in the morning, and daytime sleepiness.
Stress can sometimes lead to bedwetting and worry about daytime or nighttime wetting can make the problem worse. Stresses that may affect your child include a new baby in the family, sleeping alone, moving or starting a new school, abuse, or a family crisis.
To diagnose a bladder control problem, doctors use a child’s:
In addition, doctors will ask questions about:
Before an office visit, it’s helpful to use a bladder diary to keep track your child’s bathroom habits and how much liquid your child drinks. Write down when your child uses the toilet, the amount of urine passed, and when your child leaks urine. Record the timing and amount of liquid your child drinks, too, including whether your child drinks fluids before bedtime.
Because constipation can cause wetting or make it worse, your child’s doctor may ask you to record how often your child passes stool and whether it’s hard or soft.
Health care professionals often test a urine sample, which is called urinalysis, to help diagnose bladder control problems in children. The lab may also perform a urine culture, if requested. White blood cells and bacteria in the urine can be signs of a urinary tract infection.
Your child may need to collect a urine sample in a container. Lab tests can help diagnose the cause of bladder leaks.
In a few cases, health care professionals may order imaging tests or tests of how the urinary tract works. These tests can show a birth defect or a blockage in the urinary tract that may lead to wetting. Special tests can find nerve or spine problems. Testing can also help show a small bladder, weak muscles, or muscles that don’t work together well.
Ultrasound: An ultrasound uses sound waves to look at structures inside the body without exposing your child to radiation. During this painless test, your child lies on a padded table. A technician gently moves a wand called a transducer over your child’s belly and back. No anaesthesia is needed.
Voiding cystourethrogram (VCUG): A voiding cystourethrogram uses x-rays of the bladder and urethra to show how urine flows. A technician uses a catheter to fill your child’s bladder with a special dye. The technician then takes x-rays before, during and after your child urinates. A VCUG uses only a small amount of radiation. Anaesthesia is not needed, but the doctor may offer your child a calming medicine, called a sedative.
MRI: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) uses magnets and radio waves to make pictures of the urinary tract and spine. During this test, your child lies on a table inside a tunnel-like machine. MRI scans do not expose your child to radiation. No anaesthesia is needed, but the doctor may offer your child a calming medicine or suggest watching a children’s program during the test.
Urodynamic testing: Urodynamic testing is a group of tests that look at how well the bladder, sphincters, and urethra are storing and releasing urine. These studies are not used often, but they may be helpful when simple bladder management methods are not as successful as expected.
When a health condition causes the wetting—such as diabetes or a birth defect in the urinary tract—doctors will treat the health problem, and the wetting is likely to stop.
Other common treatments for wetting include bladder training, moisture alarms, medicines, and home care. Teamwork is important among you, your child, and your child’s doctor. You should reward your child for following a program, rather than for staying dry—because a child often cannot control wetting.
If your child wets both day and night, the doctor is likely to treat daytime wetting first. Children usually stay dry during the day before they gain bladder control at night.
Treatments for daytime wetting depend on what’s causing the wetting and will often start with changes in bladder and bowel habits. Your child’s doctor will treat any constipation, so that hard stools don’t press against the bladder and lead to wetting.
Bladder training helps your child get to the bathroom sooner and may help reset bladder systems that don’t work together smoothly.
Programs can include:
In extremely rare cases, doctors may suggest using a thin, flexible tube, called a catheter, to empty the bladder. Occasional use of a catheter may help develop better bladder control in children with a weak, underactive bladder.
Your child’s doctor may suggest medicine to limit daytime wetting or prevent a urinary tract infection (UTI).
Oxybutynin (Ditropan) is often the first choice of medicine to calm an overactive bladder until a child matures and outgrows the problem naturally.
If your child often has bladder infections, the doctor may prescribe an antibiotic, which is a medicine that kills the bacteria that cause infections. Your child’s doctor may suggest taking a low-dose antibiotic for several months to prevent repeated bladder infections.
Changes in your child’s routines and behaviour may greatly improve daytime wetting, even without other treatments.
Encourage your child to:
Children need plenty of support from parents and caregivers to overcome daytime wetting, not blame or punishment. Calming your child’s stresses may help—stresses about a new baby or new school, for example. A counsellor or psychologist can help treat anxiety.
If your child’s provider suggests treatment, it’s likely to start with ways to motivate your child and change his or her behaviour. The next steps include moisture alarms or medicine.
For a bedwetting treatment program to work, both the parent and child must be motivated. Treatment doesn’t always completely stop bedwetting—and there are likely to be some setbacks. However, treatment can greatly reduce how often your child wets the bed.
For motivational therapy, you and your child agree on ways to manage bedwetting and rewards for following the program. Keep a record of your child’s tasks and progress, such as a calendar with stickers. You can give rewards to your child for remembering to use the bathroom before bed, helping to change and clean wet bedding, and having a dry night.
Motivational therapy helps children gain a sense of control over bedwetting. Many children learn to stay dry with this approach, and many others have fewer wet nights. Taking back rewards, shaming, penalties, and punishments don’t work; your child is not wetting the bed on purpose. If there’s no change in your child’s wetting after 3 to 6 months, talk with a health care professional about other treatments.
Tracking good bathroom habits may help children develop fewer wet days or nights over time. Rewards are given for effort, because a child can’t always control wetting.
Moisture alarms detect the first drops of urine in a child’s underwear and sound an alarm to wake the child. A sensor clips to your child’s clothes or bedding. At first you may need to wake your child, get him or her to the bathroom, and clean up wet clothes and bedding. Eventually, your child learns to wake up when his or her bladder is full and get to the bathroom in time.
Moisture alarms work well for many children and can end bedwetting for good. Families need to use the alarm regularly for 3 to 4 months as the child learns to sense his or her signals and control the bladder. Signs of progress usually appear in the first few weeks—smaller wet spots, fewer alarms each night, and your child waking on his or her own.
Your child’s doctor may suggest medicine when other treatments haven’t worked well.
Desmopressin (DDAVP) is often the first choice of medicine for bedwetting. This medicine slows the amount of urine your child’s body makes overnight, so the bladder doesn’t overfill and leak. Desmopressin can work well, but bedwetting often returns when a child stops taking the medicine. You can use desmopressin for sleepovers, camp, and other short periods of time. You can also keep a child on desmopressin safely for long periods of time.
Changes in your child’s routines may improve bedwetting, when used alone or with other treatments.
Encourage your child to:
Children who wet the bed should use the bathroom just before bedtime.
Your patience, understanding, and encouragement are vital to help your child cope with a bladder control problem. If you think a health problem may be causing your child’s wetting, make an appointment with your child’s health care provider.
For children with daytime wetting, clothes that come on and off easily may help prevent accidents. A wristwatch alarm set to vibrate can privately remind your child to visit the toilet, without help from a teacher or parent.
For children who wet the bed, the following practices can make life easier and may boost your child’s confidence:
Let your child know that bedwetting is very common, and most children outgrow it. If your child is age 4 or older, ask him or her for ideas on how to stop or manage the wetting. Involving your child in finding solutions may provide a sense of control.
Calming your child’s stresses may help—stresses about a new baby or new school, for example. A counsellor or psychologist can help treat anxiety.
Often, you can’t prevent a bladder control problem, especially bedwetting, which is a common pattern of normal child development.
However, good habits may help your child have more dry days and nights, including:
This content is provided as a service of the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK), part of the National Institutes of Health. The NIDDK translates and disseminates research findings through its clearinghouses and education programs to increase knowledge and understanding about health and disease among patients, health professionals, and the public. Content produced by the NIDDK is carefully reviewed by NIDDK scientists and other experts.
Edited by: Dr Stephan A. Zderic, MD, Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
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