Treating the Problem:
1. Quick Fixes That Don't:
Medication: one common form of medication
is the tricyclic antidepressant - a drug type which is traditionally used as a
treatment for adult depression. With an initial cure rate of 25%, and a relapse
rate of 50% (2)
these drugs have a rather disappointing success rate of 12%. As well as the low
success rate there is also the concern that tricyclic antidepressants cause
side-effects such as rashes, loss of appetite and irritability, as well as being
responsible - according to a study in the UK - for poisoning more children than
any other drug. Dr Schmitt (3),
a pediatrician in the Department of Pediatrics at the University of Colorado
School of Medicine, and an expert in enuresis, refers to "...newer studies which
demonstrate tricyclic antidepressants raise the resting pulse rate and diastolic
blood pressure..." and concludes that there are "...grave doubts that these
drugs should be prescribed for any child at all". Dr Rauber and Dr Maroncelli
(16) noted
that few general practitioners seemed aware of the toxicity of tricyclic
antidepressants in overdose, and were adamant that other modes of treatment
should be explored rather than turning to what they termed "the more hazardous
pharmacologic alternatives". And finally, Dr Black
(14) tells us
that "...drugs should never be used as a first line of treatment because
of their side-effects and the danger of toxicity in overdose".
Another medication, Desmopressin, is a synthetic pituitary hormone which helps
to reduce the amount of urine produced when a patient is asleep. At first
glance, it looks like a very useful alternative because it does stop bedwetting
in a significant number of users. But for all that, Dr Wille
(19) reports that
most children return to wetting the bed after they stop using it, and Dr Houts
and his colleagues (17)
find a success rate of just 21% when the relapse rate is taken into
consideration. In addition, these types of medication have side effects
such as headaches and stomach aches and can interfere with electrolyte levels
(the proper balance of the body fluids).
Lister-Sharp et al (1997) (21)
of the University of York reviewed the treatment studies and showed that there
was no conclusive evidence that drugs had any useful effect after treatment had
ceased. At best they are useful only when being taken and for short term relief
(Houts et al (17),
Steele, (18)).
2. The Enuresis Alarm - The best long-term cure
Mode of operation: Enuresis alarms work by
emitting a loud, high-pitched beep when a child begins to pass urine. Obviously,
this causes the child to wake up; but more importantly, it causes an automatic
contraction of the external bladder sphincter (the muscle which controls the
bladder neck). No sooner has the child begun to urinate and the reflex to do so
is suppressed. Over a few weeks, most children develop an increased sensitivity
to subliminal bladder contractions during the night. They learn to inhibit the
reflex to pass urine - ultimately without having to wake up or wet the bed at
all.
Enuresis Alarms: Research into the
effectiveness of enuresis alarms has been going on for over 50 years - a fact
which is made clear by Dr Forsythe and Dr Butler
(15). Throughout
that period, success rates have risen to 90%
(6,13) - as more refined electronic
models have been introduced. Of the 90% who are cured, around 20% may relapse,
but most of these return to dry nights with another course of the alarm. In the
University of York Review Lister-Sharp et al (1997) showed that an enuresis
alarm is nine times more effective in preventing relapse than the drug
Desmopressin. And so, it will come as no surprise to discover that Dr Houts and
co (not to mention many other authorities) have described the enuresis alarm
as the most successful treatment of bedwetting to date
(15,17), and as the modern treatment of
choice (7,12, 18).
These glowing references are further reinforced by Professor Hjalmas
(20) of the Department of Pediatric Surgery
and Urology at Gothenburg who says that "the alarm should be the first line of
treatment because [it] is the only method proven to have cured the problem."
Also of interest in Dr Houts' study are the following: (i) The finding that
increased length of treatment with medication decreases its effectiveness, while
increased length of treatment with an enuresis alarm increases its
effectiveness. (ii) The discovery that children who have finished the treatment
have much higher self esteem levels than before
(12).
Treating The Child: The first few times
the alarm rings, the child is unlikely to wake up until the bladder is
completely empty and the bed is as soaked as ever. As time goes by, however, the
child learns to wake up sooner. As a result, urination can be partly inhibited
for as long as it takes to walk from the bedroom to the bathroom where the
draining process can be completed. Eventually the child learns to recognize
the feeling of a distended bladder before the alarm rings. As a result, the
bladder can be controlled before it is too late or the child can choose to wake
up and deal with the situation in a mature way. This process - of an effective
treatment leading to a three week period with no bedwetting and no alarm
activation - may take as little as a week or as long as a couple of months to
achieve.
Disclaimer: Medical science is always
changing and while the information presented in this website has been checked
with reliable sources, it can not be guaranteed against human error from those
or other sources used, or change of understanding by medical science which may
occur as research proceeds.
Report Written by: Dr. Anthony Page
References:
| 1.
|
Schmitt, B.D.
Nocturnal Enuresis: An Update on Treatment. Pediatric Clinics of North
America, 1982; 29:21 |
| 2.
|
Ibid. P.27
|
| 3.
|
Ibid. P.27
|
| 4.
|
Ibid. P.22
|
| 5.
|
Ibid. P.27
|
| 6.
|
Ibid. P.26
|
| 7.
|
Ibid. P.25
|
| 8.
|
Ibid. P.25
|
| 9.
|
Ibid. P.26
|
| 10.
|
Ibid. P.21
|
| 11.
|
Grellis, S.S. etal
Current Pediatric Therapy, 1976, Volume 17. B. Saunders, Philadelphia.
|
| 12.
|
Schirky, H.C.
Pediatric Therapy, 1980, 6 Ed.Mosby, St Louis, Missouri. |
| 13.
|
Baller, W.R.
Bed-Wetting: Origins and Treatment, 1975, Pergamon, New York. |
| 14.
|
Black, Dora.
Psychotropic drugs for problem children. British Medical Journal, 1991; 302:
190-191. |
| 15.
|
Forsythe, W.I. and
Butler, R.J. Fifty years of enuretic alarms. Archives of Diseases of
Childhood, 1989; 64: 879-885. |
| 16.
|
Rauber, Albert and
Maroncelli, Regina.Prescribing practices and knowledge of tricyclic
antidepressants among physicians caring for children. Pediatrics, 1984; 73:
107-109. |
| 17.
|
Houts, Arthur C.,
Berman, Jeffrey S., and Abramson, Hillel. Effectiveness of Psychological
and Pharmacological Treatments for Nocturnal Enuresis. Journal of Consulting
and Clinical Psychology, 1994; 62: 737-745 |
| 18.
|
Steele, Brian T.
Nocturnal Enuresis: Treatment Options. Canadian Family Physician, 1993; 39:
877-880 |
| 19.
|
Wille, S.
Comparison of desmopressin and enuresis alarm for enuresis. Archives of
Diseases of Childhood, 1989; 61: 715-726 |
| 20.
|
Hjalmas, Kelm. GP
Weekly News,1994, 23 March. Nocturnal Bedwetting is in the genes.
|
| 21.
|
Lister-Sharp, D et
al. A Systematic Review of the Effectiveness of Interventions for Managing
Childhood Nocturnal Enuresis. NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination,
University of York, 1997.
|