Autonomic nervous system dysregulation in children with monosymptomatic nocturnal enuresis

Author:

Angeli Maria1ORCID,Bitsori Maria12,Schiza Sophia E.3,Mamoulakis Charalampos14,Mavridis Charalampos4,Georgiadis Georgios4,Tzatzarakis Manolis5,Galanakis Emmanouil12

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine University of Crete Heraklion Greece

2. Department of Paediatrics Heraklion University Hospital Heraklion Greece

3. Sleep Disorders Center, Department of Respiratory Medicine, School of Medicine University of Crete Heraklion Greece

4. Department of Urology Heraklion University Hospital Heraklion Greece

5. Laboratory of Toxicology, School of Medicine University of Crete Heraklion Greece

Abstract

AbstractAimTo investigate the role of autonomic nervous system in subpopulations of children with enuresis.MethodsWe included 35 children with enuresis, divided in children with (17) and without nocturnal polyuria (18) and 43 healthy controls. For all participants hormones and neurotransmitters were measured. Patients and controls wore a sleep tracker device and children with enuresis underwent a 24 h blood pressure monitoring, nocturnal urine output measurement and uroflowmetry.ResultsChildren with enuresis had lower than controls copeptin and aldosterone, with the latter being more prominent in patients without nocturnal polyuria. Dopamine was lower in patients without nocturnal polyuria compared with patients with nocturnal polyuria. Children without polyuria experienced episodes only during NREM sleep, whereas in children with polyuria episodes occurred in both REM and NREM sleep. Children with enuresis experienced a non‐dipping phenomenon during sleep which was more prominent in the group without polyuria.ConclusionIn patients with nocturnal polyuria, nocturnal enuresis is associated with sympathetic hyperactivity which results in pressure polyuria and significantly lower systolic dipping during sleep. On the contrary, in children without nocturnal polyuria, it is mostly associated with bladder overactivity due to parasympathetic overstimulation as demonstrated by the NREM‐related enuretic episodes and the lower aldosterone and dopamine levels.

Publisher

Wiley

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