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The ABCs of UTIs
Identifying and Treating Urinary Tract Infections By Michele St. Martin
Wearing disposable absorbent underpants while working on the problem can be helpful. Children save face if they have an accident, avoiding the telltale wet bottom or odor. This may even improve a child's self-esteem, and save you from frequent laundering.
Does your child's bedwetting mean that she may have a urinary tract infection? Not likely, according to Dr. Langman, who says that fewer than one percent of children who wet the bed have a urinary tract infection. "When [bedwetting and UTIs] are related, it generally is from infection in the bladder or kidney, from a structural problem with the kidney or more rarely, from chronic kidney disease or diabetes mellitus," says Dr. Langman.
Dr. Dean agrees and says that while daytime wetting or bedwetting can signal a urinary tract infection, "the vast majority of nocturnal enuresis (bedwetting) is unrelated to infection. Nonetheless, children being evaluated for nocturnal enuresis routinely undergo urinalysis to rule out signs of infection," he says.
Dr. Dean suggests that children with a confirmed UTI undergo testing to determine its cause. "I think its important that parents know that pediatric urologists recommend that all children with documented urinary tract infections undergo a thorough evaluation including a renal-bladder ultrasound as well as a voiding-cystourethrogram (VCUG)," he says. "This is because a significant number of children with infections have structural issues including vesicourteral reflux, which can be detected by these tests."
Want to see more?
- Strategies to Maintain Bedwetters' Self-Esteem: Four Helpful Tips for Parents
- Daytime Wetting Helping Your Child Stay Dry
- Good Mornings: Bedwetting and Your Child
- Wet, but Dry
- The Effects of Divorce on Children A Potential Cause for Bedwetting
- Oh Brother, I Wet the Bed
- Childhood Baby Blues: The Effects of a New Baby on Bedwetting


