Results 221 to 230 of about 34,666 (252)
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Enuresis

Advances in Pediatrics, 2001
The authors do not have all of the data about enuresis, and many children are subject to relapses or failure of treatment. There is no cause for despondency, however. Enuresis is no longer a mystery. Good data exist about the natural history, epidemiology, and etiology of enuresis.
M W, Jalkut, S E, Lerman, B M, Churchill
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Enuresis

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1987
Enuresis is often familial, usually disappearing in adolescence, with only 1 per cent of children suffering from it into adulthood. Functional enuresis is considered to be a variation in normal bladder control, rather than a disease, and most enuretic children do not exhibit any emotional problems. A small functional bladder capacity and a maturational
A C, Novello, J R, Novello
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Enuresis: Nocturnal Enuresis and Diurnal Enuresis

Journal of Pediatrics & Neonatal Biology, 2023
The American Pediatric Academy proposed the acceptable definition of enuresis as, the involuntary wetting of clothes or bedding by urine during the daytime or nighttime. The main reasons of enuresis are delay in central nervous system maturation, under capacitated bladder, abnormalities of the urinary tract, nocturnal insufficient antidiuretic hormone ...
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Enuresis

Urologie Scan, 2014
Enuresis in childhood and adolescence is a common symptom that significantly affects the quality of life of the patients and their social environment. Advanced diagnostic and therapeutic measures have significantly improved the treatment of affected children in the last 10 years in Germany.
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Incontinence and Enuresis

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1987
Most children with incontinence not associated with known neurologic impairment will have either functional immaturity of the nervous system or inflammatory conditions of the lower urinary tract as the etiology for incontinence. By using the criteria outlined in this article, one can manage selective urologic evaluation of the diurnally incontinent and
D.A. Husmann, Gordon A. MeLorie
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Enuresis in children

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1938
Summary Three mechanisms are to be considered in the pathogenesis of enuresis, the “irritable bladder”, faulty training, and psychologic factors. Two or all three of these mechanisms may be operative in the same patient. Enuresis occurs most frequently in children with an inherited abnormalityin the mechanism of micturition, i.e., irritable bladder.
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Enuresis in Twins

Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1971
Comparison of the incidence of enuresis in monozygotic and same-sex dizygotic twins revealed that bed-wetting after the fourth birthday was present in 146 out of 676 twin children, an incidence of 22%. Monozygotic twins are concordant for enuresis about twice as frequently as dizygotic twins, a statistically significant difference.
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Enuresis and Encopresis

Psychiatric Clinics of North America, 1982
Enuresis and encopresis must be seen as symptoms, not diseases, occurring in heterogeneous groups of children. A number of known factors are etiologically relevant to each symptom, and it is likely that others remain to be discovered. Both enuresis and encopresis are truly psychosomatic entities, in which psychosocial and physiologic elements act and ...
Jill Armbrust, Gregory K. Fritz
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