Title: [Enuresis and encopresis: their relationship].
Abstract: The incidence and types of enuresis in 113 encopretic children were studied. The sex ratio was 5.17 males to every 1 female. Half of the patients were enuretics (50.44%). Of these, 78.9% were primary and secondary enuretics. No primary encopretic manifested secondary enuresis. The ratio of primary to secondary enuresis (3.75:1) in children with encopresis was much lower than in the population of enuretics. Of the enuretic encopretics, 40.34% had mixed or diurnal bladder incontinence. The results emphasize the role of peripheral dysfunctions and constipation-encopresis in the etiology of some enuresis. The therapeutic implications of these findings are also discussed.
Publication Year: 1993
Publication Date: 1993-10-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['pubmed']
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Cited By Count: 7
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