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A boy cries as he recuperates after surgery during "Operation Smile" at a hospital in Manila's Makati financial district October 26, 2009. Operation Smile aim to provide free surgery for about a hundred children inflicted with cleft lips, cleft palates, and other facial deformities over a period of five days in Makati.  REUTERS/Cheryl Ravelo

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    Bedwetting linked with intellectual decline

    Tue Dec 4, 2007 5:25pm EST

    HONG KONG (Reuters Health) - Children who regularly wet the bed at night score worse on multiple measures of cognitive performance than do non-bedwetting children, researchers reported here at the International Children's Continence Society (ICCS) meeting.

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    Dr. Chung Kwong Yeung, chairman of pediatric surgery and pediatric urology at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and colleagues tracked changes in cognitive function in 95 bedwetting children. (Cognitive function refers abilities such as intelligence, short-term memory and attention focus.)

    The researchers also tested 46 children of the same age without the condition, which is also referred to as nocturnal enuresis. All of the children were evaluated over a 2-year period using several widely accepted cognitive tests.

    "Prior research had shown that bedwetting children have inferior sleep quality, including sleep fragmentation and sleep deprivation, but paradoxically have more difficulty in completely awakening," Yeung, who is also ICCS President, pointed out. "Since sleep deprivation may have a negative impact on daytime cognitive functioning, it is important to examine whether there is an underlying connection between nocturnal enuresis and cognitive performance."

    No studies have systematically compared cognition in bed-wetting and non-bed-wetting children or assessed cognitive changes after treatment for bedwetting, he added.

    Patients in the enuretic group had an average of five bedwetting episodes per week. These children also had poorer scores than the comparison group on standardized tests of intelligence, focused attention, and short-term memory. The chronic bedwetters also had worse retention ability and long-term memory and a lower learning speed and reaction.

    However, 6 months of treatment with desmopressin, a drug that increases urine concentration and decreases urine production, plus bladder re-training significantly improved all measures of cognitive function. Sleep-awakening ability and brainstem function, which has also been shown to be impaired in children with primary nocturnal enuresis, were also restored to normal after treatment.

    "The findings are important because treatment of bedwetting should help patients achieve more than getting over the stigma of being wet," Dr. Stuart Bauer, professor of urology at Harvard Medical School in Boston, told Reuters Health. "We now know that treatment can improve cognition and can therefore be expected to improve their school performance, self-image, and their interactions with peers and family members."



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