ABSTRACT

Study participants were fifty 5- to 13-year-old children (33 boys and 17 girls) with nocturnal enuresis of at least 3 months duration. All wet their beds at least twice per week, were of normal intelligence, and were without demonstrable organic cause for their enuresis. Each youngster’s pretreatment maximum functional bladder capacity (MFBC) was used to classify the child as having small or large MFBC based on available norms. Youngsters were then randomly assigned to treatment with the urine alarm (UA) alone or with the urine alarm supplemented with retention control training (UA plus RCT). Of the 40 youngsters who completed treatment, 37 (92.5%) achieved the treatment goal of 14 consecutive dry nights. Two additional children became dry during follow-up, leaving only one child who failed to stop wetting. Sixteen children (41%) subsequently relapsed, but all who reentered treatment became dry. Because treatment outcome was uniformly excellent across all groups, treatment progress was evaluated by analyzing wetting frequency and arising at night to use the bathroom during treatment, as well as prechange and postchange in MFBC. For both wetting frequency and arising at night, there was a significant interaction between bladder capacity and treatment. Small MFBC children treated with the UA plus RCT and large MFBC youngsters treated with the UA alone had the fewest wetting episodes and got up at night to use the bathroom less often; these youngsters took less time to be successfully treated. Prechanges and post-changes in MFBC indicated that RCT did not lead to consistent increases in bladder capacity in the sample studies. The 10 children who terminated treatment prematurely had lower self-esteem and more parent-reported conduct problems than the 40 children who completed treatment.