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Nightime bedwetting or nocturnal enuresis is a common phenomenon among children younger than five years of age. However, among children older than five years, night time bed wetting that occurs more than twice a week is a cause for concern.
Diagnosis of the condition involves obtaining a detailed history of the child's symptoms and the frequency of their bedwetting. Parents are asked to keep a diary recording the number of times per week the child has wet their bed as well as daily recordings of their fluid intake, toilet visits, and voiding volume. The child is then examined and tests are run to rule out other underlying conditions.
Some of these tests include:
In the majority of cases, childhood bedwetting does not require any specific treatment and usually resolves with parental support and lifestyle modifications. Such lifestyle alterations include:
Petroleum jelly applied to the child's buttocks and inner thighs can help prevent rashes associated with frequent bedwetting. Waterproof bed sheets and disposable diapers can be used to keep the child dry at night. A bedwetting alarm can be used to help parents monitor the frequency of bedwetting as well as to help the the child become adjusted to waking up and going to pass urine during the night.
Specific therapies may be used to treat children with underlying causes of bedwetting and these include: