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Bedwetting Center - Bend, OR

Bend Pediatrician Doctors for Bedwetting

Type of Physician: Pediatrician

What is a Pediatrician?

A certification by the Board of Pediatrics; practitioners are concerned with the physical, emotional, and social health of children from birth to young adulthood. Pediatric care encompasses a wide range of health services, from preventive health care to the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic diseases. The pediatrician understands the constantly changing status of his/her patients due to growth and development, and the consequent changing standards of "normal" for age.

Specialty: Pediatrics

Common Name: Children's Doctor

Pediatrician Doctors in Bend *

Mosaic Medical
Peter Boehm
409 NE Greenwood Ave
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 383-3005

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Valerie Bailie
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Stacy C Berube
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Mary Brown
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Kim Caruso
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
John Chunn
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
John Evered
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Erin Garza
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Caroline Gutmann
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Brenda Hedges
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Central Oregon Pediatrics Associates LLP
Dale Svendsen
2200 NE Professional Dr
Bend, OR 97701
(541) 389-6313

Pioneer Health Care Center
James A Weeks
1103 NE Elm St
Prineville, OR 97754
(541) 447-6263

Bend, Oregon

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Bedwetting

What is bedwetting?

Bedwetting, also called nocturnal enuresis, is the involuntary passage of urine (urinary incontinence) while asleep. Inherent in the definition of bedwetting is satisfactory bladder control while the person is awake. Therefore, urination while awake is a different condition and has a variety of difference causes than bedwetting.

What are the types of bedwetting?

There are two types of bedwetting:

  1. Primary enuresis: bedwetting since infancy
  2. Secondary enuresis: wetting developed after being continually dry for a minimum of six months

What is primary bedwetting?

Primary bedwetting is viewed as a delay in maturation of the nervous system. At 5 years of age, approximately 20% of children wet the bed at least once a month, with about 5% of males and 1% of females wetting nightly. By 6 years of age, only about 10% of children are bedwetters -- the large majority being boys. The percentage of all children who are bedwetters continues to diminish by 50% each year after 5 years of age. Family history plays a big role in predicting primary bedwetting. If one parent was a bedwetter, the offspring have a 45% chance of a developing primary enuresis as well.

What is the basic problem in primary bedwetting?

The fundamental problem for children with primary bedwetting is the inability to recognize messages of the nervous system sent by the full bladder to the sleep arousal centers of the brain while asleep. In addition, bladder capacity is often smaller in bedwetting children than in their peers.

Is primary bedwetting due to emotional problems?

Parents sometimes believe that their child's primary bedwetting is emotional. No medical or scientific literature exists to support this impression.

How is primary bedwet...

Recommended Reading Related to Bedwetting

Sleep »

What is sleep?

There are over 20 definitions of "sleep" in several dictionaries. The first, a verb, seems most appropriate:

to take the rest afforded by a suspension of voluntary bodily functions and the natural suspension, complete or partial, of consciousness; cease being awake.

Physiologically, sleep is a complex process of restoration and renewal for the body. Scientists still do not have a definitive explanation for why humans have a need for sleep. We do know that sleep is not a passive process or "switching off" of body functions; sleep is believed to be important in many physiologic processes including the processing of experiences and the consolidation of memories. It is also clear that sleep is essential, not only for humans but for almost all animals.

The importance of sleep is underscored by the symptoms experienced by those suffering from sleep problems. People s...

Emergency Contact for Bend

  • In case of Emergency, call 911

Nearby Bend Hospitals *

St Charles Medical Center Bend
2500 NE Neff Rd
Bend, OR 97701
(541)382-4321

St Charles Medical Center Redmond
1253 N Canal Blvd
Redmond, OR 97756
(541)548-8131

Pioneer Memorial Hospital
1201 NE Elm St
Prineville, OR 97754
(541)447-6254

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