Contact:
Christine Guilfoy
Office: (301) 634-7253
cguilfoy@the-aps.org
Sodium, Prostaglandin May Be Keys To
Successful Treatment For Some Bedwetters
Bethesda,
Md (Dec. 1, 2006) – Children with a form of bedwetting that does not respond
to a common medication have more sodium and urea in their nighttime urine,
possibly because of an imbalance of prostaglandin, a hormone-like substance,
a new study has found.
The finding helps physiologists understand why about
30% of children who suffer from bedwetting (nocturnal enuresis) do not
respond to desmopressin, a drug that successfully treats the other 70%. The
findings, made by Danish medical doctors who treat enuresis, could help lead
to better treatment for these children.
The study “Nocturnal polyuria in monosymptomatic
nocturnal enuresis refractory to desmopressin treatment,” was carried out by
Konstantinos Kamperis and Jens Christian Djurhuus of the University of
Aarhus, Aarhus, Denmark and Soren Rittig and Kaj Anker Jorgensen of the
Aarhus University Hospital. The study appears in the December issue of the
American Journal of Physiology-Renal Physiology published by
the American Physiological Society.
Circadian rhythm important
Urine output is controlled, in part, by our own
internal daily clocks, or circadian rhythm. With the transition from day to
night, our bodies reduce the amount of excreted water, electrolytes and
other metabolic end products in preparation for hours of sleep. We are not
born with this circadian rhythm, but it usually develops in early childhood.
Some children take longer to develop this rhythm, which
is why about 15% of enuretic children will spontaneously stop bedwetting
each year without any intervention or treatment. The condition affects 7-10
percent of 7-year-old children, but some severe cases linger much longer. As
many as 2 percent of young adults have the problem, which may persist for
life.
In a psychological sense, enuresis takes a severe toll,
and is among the conditions children worry about most, Rittig said. When
asked to imagine the worst things that could happen to them, children rated
bedwetting in the top 10, he said.
Rittig published a study in 1989 showing that the
hormone vasopressin plays a role in enuresis. This research helped lead to
the use of desmopressin to stop bedwetting in many enuretic children. But he
and others have remained puzzled as to why some children do not respond to
desmopressin. In this study, the researchers set out to understand the
physiological mechanisms behind the 30% of desmopressin nonresponders.
24-hour study
The researchers examined 46 enuretic children, ages
7-14, who were outpatients at the Center for Child Incontinence at Aarhus
University Hospital and whose enuresis had failed to respond to desmopressin.
The enuretic children were subdivided into a “polyuric” group (average
nocturnal output on wet nights exceeded 130% of expected bladder capacity)
and nonpolyuric (output on wet nights less than 130% of expected capacity).
The study also included an age-matched control group of 15 non-enuretic
children.
The children spent two nights at Aarhus University
Hospital. The first night was to acclimate the children to the hospital
environment while the second night was the experimental period. The
researchers collected blood and urine from the children during the second
night, without waking them. This gave the researchers a more complete
picture of physiological changes that occur through the course of an entire
night.
Fluid and sodium intake was standardized for all
children, based on their weight, to eliminate the possibility that enuretic
episodes were related either to excess sodium or fluid intake. All children
had adequate bladder capacity and were healthy. None experienced daytime
incontinence.
Some enuretic children (five polyurics and four
nonpolyurics) did not have a wet night during their stay. This is not
unusual for enuretic children, many of whom get through some nights without
an episode. The enuretic children who were dry provided one more opportunity
to find the physiological difference between them on dry and wet nights,
Kamperis said.
Results implicate sodium
Circadian variations in urine output were evident for
all groups. However, polyuric children excreted twice as much urine during
the night, compared to the nonpolyuric children and the controls. The
researchers found that the urine of the polyuric children who wet their beds
during the experiment contained more:
-
sodium
-
urea
-
prostaglandin
Interestingly, the children who wet the bed did not
excrete a greater volume of water: It was the sodium and urea content that
made the difference. Sodium and urea excretion was much higher among
children who wet the bed, and these substances expand the volume of urine in
the bladder, leading to enuresis.
The study also found that urine from enuretic episodes
in the first hours of sleep is quite different from the urine the
researchers collected in the morning. “When we look at what happens in the
last hours of the night, we couldn’t find any differences,” Kamperis said.
“The first hours are most important.”
The study looked at a variety of other factors that
could play a role in bedwetting, including mean arterial pressure, heart
rate, atrial natriuretic peptide, angiotensin II, aldosterone and renin
levels, but found no differences among the groups. Also, there was no
difference in the amount of vasopressin between the two enuretic groups.
“We found enuresis-related polyuria to be largely due
to an abnormal nocturnal renal handling of solutes and in particular,
sodium,” the authors wrote. While the study suggests that sodium is the main
culprit among this subpopulation of enuretic children, there is much still
to be done to understand how the process works.
The increased prostaglandin production of the polyurics
could account for the difference in excretion of sodium, the authors noted.
Prostaglandins counteract the actions of vasopressin and influence of how
much sodium we excrete.
Next step: treatment trial
The researchers have begun treating children who do not
respond to desmopressin with indomethacin, a prostaglandin inhibitor. Those
trials, which include a placebo, are expected to be completed within a year,
Rittig said.
Funding
This study was supported by grants from the
University of Aarhus Research Foundation, Egmont Foundation and
Karen Elise Jensen Foundation.
Editor’s note: To schedule an interview with a
member of the research team, please contact Christine Guilfoy, American
Physiological Society, (301) 634-7253 or
cguilfoy@the-aps.org.
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