Research investigates impact of herbal medicine product on bedwetting in children

A new clinical trial investigating whether an herbal medicine product can benefit school-age children experiencing bedwetting is being led by a collaboration between researchers from the Australian Research Centre in Complementary and Integrative Medicine (ARCCIM) at the University of Technology Sydney and the Office of Research at Endeavour College of Natural Health.

The trial will examine whether a specialised combination of medicinal herbs can reduce the frequency of wet nights and mornings for children between 6 and 14 years old. Bedwetting—also known as nocturnal enuresis—can occur in 1 in 5 Australian school-aged children and has a wide range of impacts on the child and their family. "While there are a number of possible therapies parents can use to treat their child, none are universally effective" explains Principal Investigator, Dr. Janet Schloss, from Endeavour College of Natural Health and ARCCIM, "Many of these interventions are behavioural or educational and place a lot of pressure on parents with no guarantee of continued effectiveness after the therapy ceases."

The TGA-listed herbal product being studied, Urox—Bedtime Buddy, is a combination of three herbs which have already been shown to benefit adults with and overactive bladder. A key outcome from this previous study was the significant reduction in adult night time incontinence.

The clinical trial is funded by Seipel Group Pty Ltd, the Australian company responsible for producing Urox. "As an organisation we are committed to evidence-based medicine and so when we started receiving anecdotal reports from parents that Urox was really helping their children's bedwetting we realised we needed to explore this further" says Tracey Seipel, Director of Seipel Pty Ltd.

The collaboration between ARCCIM and Endeavour College of Natural Health for this project is being led by Associate Director Research at Endeavour and ARCCIM Research Fellow, Dr. Amie Steel. "From my perspective, all warrants close examination through rigorous and robust research and herbal medicine is no different. We know that parents often use herbal and other complementary medicines to support their child's so I am very glad we have an opportunity to contribute to research which will help parent's make evidence-informed decisions about their child's health care".

About the trial

  • The trial has ethics approval and is currently underway.
  • The ARCCIM and Endeavour collaborative research team will assess the suitability of participants from the general community.
  • The trial will recruit 80 participants between 6 and 14 years old who has bedwetting incidents more than 3 time per week.
  • The intervention will continue for 8 weeks.
  • The intervention will be compared to a placebo.
  • Participants' parents will receive a $50 voucher by the end of the study to compensate for any expenses associated with participation.
  • The trial is being conducted from Brisbane and with bedwetting children interested in participating are encouraged to contact the research team.
Citation: Research investigates impact of herbal medicine product on bedwetting in children (2019, March 5) retrieved 25 April 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2019-03-impact-herbal-medicine-product-bedwetting.html
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