EditorialTwenty Years of Urotherapy in Children: What Have We Learned?
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Cited by (51)
Current pharmacological management of idiopathic overactive bladder in children in the UK: a national survey of practice
2020, Journal of Pediatric UrologyPelvic floor rehabilitation in children with functional LUTD: does it improve outcome?
2019, Journal of Pediatric UrologyDoes a serious game increase intrinsic motivation in children receiving urotherapy?
2019, Journal of Pediatric UrologyVoiding school as a treatment for daytime incontinence or enuresis: Assessing the effectiveness of intervention by measuring changes in wetting episodes
2018, Journal of Pediatric UrologyCitation Excerpt :The first-line treatment is standard urotherapy, and patient education that highlights general lifestyle advice based on proper history taking and using a voiding diary [2,3]. Since the late 1980s, different urotherapy interventions for children with incontinence have been reported to have success rates of 60–90% [4–8]. The different measures and definitions of successful treatment outcomes make it challenging to compare the effectiveness of interventions.
Voiding school as a treatment of daytime incontinence or enuresis: Children's experiences of the intervention
2018, Journal of Pediatric UrologyBladder Training Video versus Standard Urotherapy for Bladder and Bowel Dysfunction: A Noninferiority Randomized, Controlled Trial
2017, Journal of UrologyCitation Excerpt :Interestingly, our results revealed that BTV was equally effective regardless of gender and age group. Hoebeke stated that the ideal urotherapy program is the one that produces the best results at the lowest cost.21 In our current practice the standard 15-minute clinic visit time is typically not long enough to address all of the issues related to a new consult with a patient who has BBD.