Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The most effective treatment is dry bed training and an enuresis alarm.
Many children with Enuresis will develop this skill as they grow older.
In general, children over the age of 5 or 6 years are mostly treated by enuresis clinics.
It is also indicated for the treatment of nocturnal enuresis.
On one hand, the frequency of enuresis declines as children grow older.
Training pants are available for children who experience enuresis.
There was no pattern of inheritance found for families in which children had secondary enuresis.
The majority of children with enuresis show no other symptoms besides wetting the bed at night.
Numbers show that diurnal enuresis is much less common.
An alarming approach to the treatment of nocturnal enuresis.
Like sleepwalking, enuresis is more common in children and fades away as the child ages.
In secondary enuresis a child wets only occasionally, after having been dry for at least six months.
Enuresis occurs when children repeatedly urinate in other places than the toilet.
Research has found, however, that enuresis is not associated with sociopathic behavior.
Primary enuresis refers to children who have never been successfully trained to control urination.
It is also used with other therapies for the treatment of nighttime bed-wetting (enuresis) in children.
Enuresis is the "unintentional bed-wetting during sleep, persistent after the age of five".
A much smaller number of children have what is called "secondary" bedwetting or enuresis.
From reports of management within enuresis clinics it is reasonable to predict that 400000 might be curable.
Nocturnal bed-wetting, or enuresis, is most common among young children, and usually ceases by the age of four.
Nocturnal enuresis can be due to a urinary tract infection, or other medical conditions.
Genetic- there is a genetic component within Enuresis and it tends to run in families.
Mixed enuresis - Includes a combination of nocturnal and diurnal type.
Daytime accidental wetting (diurnal enuresis) is common in younger children.
Consequently, young children sometimes suffer from nocturnal enuresis.