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Case Reports
. 2025 Jul 8:6:1599599.
doi: 10.3389/fresc.2025.1599599. eCollection 2025.

Sensory integration combined with interoceptive interventions for functional urinary incontinence in children: a case report

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Case Reports

Sensory integration combined with interoceptive interventions for functional urinary incontinence in children: a case report

Lingshan Ma et al. Front Rehabil Sci. .

Abstract

Background: Functional urinary incontinence is prevalent among children and affects their daily life, psychology, and behavior. Although some behavioral therapies have been reported before, there is still no consensus on the treatment plan for functional urinary incontinence in children.

Case information: This case describes an 8-year-old girl presenting with urgency, urine leakage and frequent nocturnal enuresis. An 8-week sensory integration therapy combined with interoceptive training was implemented, followed by follow-up visits at 4 and 8 weeks after the intervention. Her urinary urgency and leakage symptoms gradually decreased over the 8 weeks of treatment and resolved completely by week 12. However, nocturnal enuresis persisted, suggesting the limited efficacy of sensory-based interventions in non-awake states.

Conclusions: The therapeutic effect of this case study indicates that interoceptive-sensory integration training has a positive effect on impaired bladder perception and voiding control during wakefulness and provides a new perspective for the evaluation and treatment of functional urinary incontinence. However, the improvement of enuresis by sensory enhancement still needs further research.

Keywords: case report; interoception; nocturnal enuresis; sensory integration; urinary incontinence.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Dynamic changes in bladder sensation and nocturnal voiding patterns across intervention and follow-up phases. (A) Daily self-reported bladder sensation scores when going to the toilet over 30 consecutive days of intervention. (B) Weekly self-reported bladder sensation scores during intervention and follow-up. (C) Weekly nocturnal enuresis frequency and mother-assisted scheduled voiding episodes during intervention and follow-up. Sensation codes: 0 (absence of sensation with socially motivated voiding), (1) (normal desire to void), (2) (urgency that subsided before reaching the toilet), (3) (urgency without incontinence), and (4) (urgency with incontinence).

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