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      Practical consensus guidelines for the management of enuresis

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          Abstract

          Despite the high prevalence of enuresis, the professional training of doctors in the evaluation and management of this condition is often minimal and/or inconsistent. Therefore, patient care is neither optimal nor efficient, which can have a profound impact on affected children and their families. Once comprehensive history taking and evaluation has eliminated daytime symptoms or comorbidities, monosymptomatic enuresis can be managed efficaciously in the majority of patients. Non-monosymptomatic enuresis is often a more complex condition; these patients may benefit from referral to specialty care centers. We outline two alternative strategies to determine the most appropriate course of care. The first is a basic assessment covering only the essential components of diagnostic investigation which can be carried out in one office visit. The second strategy includes several additional evaluations including completion of a voiding diary, which requires extra time during the initial consultation and two office visits before treatment or specialty referral is provided. This should yield greater success than first-line treatment. Conclusion: This guideline, endorsed by major international pediatric urology and nephrology societies, aims to equip a general pediatric practice in both primary and secondary care with simple yet comprehensive guidelines and practical tools (i.e., checklists, diary templates, and quick-reference flowcharts) for complete evaluation and successful treatment of enuresis.

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          Most cited references53

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          Evaluation of and treatment for monosymptomatic enuresis: a standardization document from the International Children's Continence Society.

          We provide updated, clinically useful recommendations for treating children with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis. Evidence was gathered from the literature and experience was gathered from the authors with priority given to evidence when present. The draft document was circulated among all members of the International Children's Continence Society as well as other relevant expert associations before completion. Available evidence suggests that children with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis could primarily be treated by a primary care physician or an adequately educated nurse. The mainstays of primary evaluation are a proper history and a voiding chart. The mainstays of primary therapy are bladder advice, the enuresis alarm and/or desmopressin. Therapy resistant cases should be handled by a specialist doctor. Among the recommended second line therapies are anticholinergics and in select cases imipramine. Enuresis in a child older than 5 years is not a trivial condition, and needs proper evaluation and treatment. This requires time but usually does not demand costly or invasive procedures. Copyright 2010 American Urological Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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            Nocturnal enuresis: an international evidence based management strategy.

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              Differences in characteristics of nocturnal enuresis between children and adolescents: a critical appraisal from a large epidemiological study.

              To evaluate any differences in the characteristics of primary nocturnal enuresis (PNE) between younger enuretic children and adolescents. In all, 21 000 questionnaires designed to determine the presence or absence of bed-wetting, diurnal incontinence, frequency of wetting, systemic illness, and family history, were sent to children aged 5-19 years from 67 kindergartens, primary schools and secondary schools randomly selected by a computer from different areas in Hong Kong. In addition, questions were asked to evaluate when and how the parents became aware that bed-wetting is a significant medical problem deserving attention in children after the age of 5 years. Of the 21,000 questionnaires distributed, 16 512 (78.6%) were completed. Among the respondents, 512 children (302 boys, 210 girls) had PNE; of these, 106 (20.7%) also had daytime incontinence. There was a marked reduction in the overall prevalence of PNE with advancing age. At 5 years old, 16.1% of children had PNE (20.7% boys, 10.8% girls; at age 9 and 19 years, 3.14% and 2.2% of children had PNE, respectively. However, this reduction was significantly more apparent among those with mild enuretic symptoms (wet 10 years had daytime urinary incontinence than had enuretic children aged 10 years and adolescents have significantly more daytime urinary symptoms and incontinence. The previously reported low prevalence of PNE in Hong Kong was probably due to parental indifference to the problem.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                +32-9-3322483 , +32-9-3323875 , johan.vandewalle@uzgent.be
                soren.rittig@skejby.rm.dk
                stuart.bauer@childrens.harvard.edu
                p.eggert@pediatrics.uni-kiel.de
                kehrel.daniela@t-online.de
                tekgul-k@tr.net
                Journal
                Eur J Pediatr
                Eur. J. Pediatr
                European Journal of Pediatrics
                Springer-Verlag (Berlin/Heidelberg )
                0340-6199
                1432-1076
                24 February 2012
                24 February 2012
                June 2012
                : 171
                : 6
                : 971-983
                Affiliations
                [ ]Pediatric Nephrology Unit, Ghent University Hospital, Ghent, Belgium
                [ ]Department of Pediatrics, Aarhus University Hospital, Skejby, Denmark
                [ ]Department of Urology, Children’s Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA USA
                [ ]University Children’s Hospital, Kiel, Germany
                [ ]Urology Consultancy, Frankfurt/Main, Germany
                [ ]Department of Urology, Hacettepe University School of Medicine, Ankara, Turkey
                [ ]Pediatric Nephrology UZ Ghent, De Pintelaan 185, 9000 Ghent, Belgium
                Article
                1687
                10.1007/s00431-012-1687-7
                3357467
                22362256
                1a267439-7e0a-4695-94b3-155918dad7ac
                © The Author(s) 2012
                History
                : 25 November 2011
                : 25 January 2012
                Categories
                Original Article
                Custom metadata
                © Springer-Verlag 2012

                Pediatrics
                management,consensus guidelines,enuresis,monosymptomatic,primary care
                Pediatrics
                management, consensus guidelines, enuresis, monosymptomatic, primary care

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