| Enuresis (bed-wetting) is the term used for the involuntary passage of
urine during sleep. We consider it normal until age 6.
Causes
Most of these children have inherited small bladders, which cannot hold all the urine
produced in a night. In addition, they are deep sleepers who don't awaken to the
signal of a full bladder. The kidneys are normal. Physical causes are very
rare, and your physician can easily detect them Emotional problems do not cause
enuresis, but they can occur if it is mishandled.
Expected Course
Most children who are bed-wetting overcome the problem between ages 6 and 10. Even
without treatment, all children eventually get over it. Therefore, treatments that
might have harmful complications should not be used. On the other hand, treatments
without side effects can be started as soon as your child has had complete bladder control
during the daytime for 6 to 12 months.
Home Care for a Child of
Any Age Who Is Bed-Wetting
- Encourage your child to get up to urinate during the
night. This advice is more important than any other. Tell your child
at bedtime, "Try to get up when you have to pee."
- Improve access to the toilet. Put a
night light in the bathroom. If the bathroom is at a distant location, try to put a
portable toilet in your child's bedroom. Boys will do fine with a bucket.
- Encourage daytime fluids. Encourage
your child to drink a lot during the morning and early afternoon. The more your
child drinks, the more urine your child will produce, and more urine leads to larger
bladders.
- Discourage evening fluids.
Discourage your child from drinking a lot during the 2 hours before bedtime. Give
gentle reminders about this, but don't worry about normal amounts of drinking.
Avoid any drinks containing caffeine.
- Empty the bladder at bedtime.
Sometimes the parent needs to remind the child. Older children may respond better to
a sign at their bedside or on the bathroom mirror.
- Take your child out of diapers or Pull-ups. Although
this protective layer makes morning clean-up easier, it can interfere with motivation for
getting up at night.
- Protect the bed from urine. Odor becomes a
problem if urine soaks into the mattress. Protect the mattress with a plastic cover.
- Include your child in morning clean-up.
Including your child as a helper in stripping the bedclothes and putting them into
the washing machine provides a natural disincentive for being wet. Older children
can perform this task independently. Also, make sure that your child takes a shower
each morning so that he does not smell of urine at school.
- Respond positively to dry nights.
Praise your child on mornings when he wakes up dry. A calendar with gold stars for
dry nights may also help.
- Respond gently to wet nights. Your child
does not like being wet. Most bed-wetters feel quite guilty and embarrassed about
this problem. They need support and encouragement, not blame or punishment.
Siblings should not be allowed to tease bed-wetters. Your home needs to be a safe
haven for your child. Punishment or pressure will delay a cure and cause secondary
emotional problems.
Additional Home Care When
Your Child Reaches Age 6
Follow the previous recommendations in addition to the guidelines given below:
- Help your child understand his goal.
The key to becoming dry is to learn how to self-awaken every night and find the
toilet. Getting up and urinating during the night can keep your child dry regardless
of how small the bladder is or how much fluid he drinks. Help your child assume
responsibility for doing this. Some children think that enuresis is the parent's
problem to solve; they need to be reminded that "only you can solve this."
- Have a bedtime pep talk about self-awakening. To
help your child learn to awaken himself at night, encourage him to practice the following
routine at bedtime:
- Lie on your bed with your eyes closed.
- Pretend it's the middle of the night.
- Pretend your bladder is full.
- Pretend you feel the pressure.
- Pretend your bladder is trying to wake you up.
- Pretend your bladder is saying, "get up before it's too late."
- Then run to the bathroom and empty your bladder.
- Remind yourself to get up like this during the night.
3. Daytime practice of self-awakening.
Whenever you have an urge to urinate and you're
home, go to your bedroom rather than the bathroom. Lie down and pretend you're
sleeping. Tell yourself this is how your bladder feels during the night when
it tries to awaken you. After a few minutes, go to the bathroom and urinate
(just as you should at night).
4. Parent-awakening. If
self-awakening fails, use parent-awakening to teach
your child the correct goal: urinating into the
toilet during the night. It makes much more sense than putting your child back into
pull-ups and having him urinate in bed every night (the wrong goal). Your job is to
wake your child up; his job is to locate the bathroom and use the toilet. You can
awaken him at your bedtime. Try a hierarchy of prompts ranging from turning on a
light, saying his name, touching him, shaking him or turning on an alarm clock. If
your child is confused and very hard to awaken, try again in 20 minutes. Once he's
awake, he needs to find the bathroom without any directions or guidance. When he
awakens quickly to sound or touch for 7 consecutive nights, he's either cured or ready for
an enuresis alarm.
5. Encourage changing wet clothes
during the night. If your child wets at night, he should try to stop the
flow of urine. Second, he should hurry to the toilet to see if he has any urine left in
his bladder. Third, he should change himself and put a dry towel over the wet part
of the bed. (This step can be made easier if you always keep dry pajamas and towels on a
chair near the bed.)
Additional Intervention
When Your Child Reaches Age 8
Follow the previous recommendations. Talk with your physician about possibly
using enuresis alarms or drugs as well, as described below:
Bed-wetting alarms.
Alarms are used to teach a child to awaken when he needs to urinate during the
night. They go off when they become wet. One type awakens you with a loud
noise, the other type with an annoying vibration. They have the highest cure rate of
any available approach. They are the treatment of choice for any bed-wetter with a
small bladder who can't otherwise train himself to awaken at night. The new
transistorized alarms are small, lightweight, sensitive to a few drops of urine, not too
expensive, and easy for a child to set up by himself. Some children as young as 5
years want to use them. Children using alarms still need to work on the
self-awakening program.
- Alarm clock. If your child is unable
to awaken himself at night and you can't afford a bed-wetting alarm, teach him to use an
alarm clock. Set it for 3 or 4 hours after your child goes to bed. Put it beyond
arm's reach. Encourage your child to practice responding to the alarm during the day
while lying on the bed with eyes closed. Have your child set the alarm each night.
Praise your child for getting up at night, even if he isn't dry in the morning.
- Medication. Most bed-wetters
need extra help with staying dry during slumber parties, camping trips, vacations, or
other overnights. Some take an alarm clock with them and stay dry by awakening once
at night. Some are helped by temporarily taking a drug at bedtime. One drug (given
by nasal spray) decreased urine production at night and is quite safe. Another drug
(taken as a pill) temporarily increases bladder capacity. It is safe at the correct
dosage but dangerous if too much is taken or a younger sibling gets into it. If you
do use a medication, be careful about the amount you use and where you store the drug, and
be sure to keep the safety cap on the bottle. The drawback of these medicines is
that when they are stopped, the bed-wetting usually returns. They do not cure
bed-wetting. Therefore, children taking drugs for enuresis should also be using an
alarm and learning to get up at night.
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