Enuresis - Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment | BMJ Best Practice Enuresis has primarily nocturnal symptoms in children older than 5 years of age Differentials include diabetes, medications, emotional problems, urinary tract infection, spina bifida, seizure disorder, and neurogenic bladder Treatment is commonly involves behavioural changes, alarm therapy, or desmopressin
Enurese - Sintomas, diagnóstico e tratamento | BMJ Best Practice A enurese tem primariamente sintomas noturnos em crianças com mais de 5 anos de idade Os diferenciais incluem diabetes, medicamentos, problemas emocionais, infecção do trato urinário, espinha bífida, transtorno convulsivo e bexiga neurogênica
Enuresis - References | BMJ Best Practice US Enuresis has primarily nocturnal symptoms in children older than 5 years of age Differentials include diabetes, medications, emotional problems, urinary tract infection, spina bifida, seizure disorder, and neurogenic bladder Treatment commonly involves behavioral changes, alarm therapy, or desm
Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment - BMJ Best Practice Complications of psychogenic polydipsia include incontinence and enuresis, bladder dilation and hydronephrosis, renal and congestive heart failure, and osteoporosis and associated pathologic fractures Diagnosis is one of exclusion Other medical causes of polydipsia, polyuria, and or hyponatremia need to be ruled out
Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment - BMJ Best Practice Presentation of primary adrenal insufficiency (Addison's disease) may be acute or insidious, with progressive substantial fatigue and generalised weakness associated with mucocutaneous hyperpigmentation, hypotension and or postural hypotension, and salt craving
Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment - BMJ Best Practice enuresis; periodic limb movement disorder (mainly nonrapid eye movement sleep parasomnias) sleep deprivation (sleepwalking and sleep paralysis) stress (nightmare disorder) psychiatric disorders (nightmare disorder, sleep paralysis) neurologic disorders (rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder)
Urinary incontinence in women - BMJ Best Practice Urinary incontinence in women is involuntary, spontaneous urine loss that occurs either with strenuous physical activity (stress incontinence), or urine loss is associated with an uncontrollable sense of urgency (urgency incontinence), or both (mixed incontinence)
Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment - BMJ Best Practice Obstructive uropathy is blockage of urinary flow, which can occur at any level in the urinary tract It may affect one or both kidneys, depending on the level of obstruction
Symptoms, diagnosis and treatment - BMJ Best Practice Hyperhidrosis is an excess sweating condition beyond physiological need Classified as primary and of unknown cause (idiopathic), or secondary due to an underlying condition (usually an infectious, endocrine, or neurological disorder)