Medically reviewed by: Dr. Anthony Kallas Chemaly
Last reviewed: April 5, 2026
Sources used on this page: trusted clinical references and pediatric-hospital resources listed below.
What is bladder dysfunction in children?
Bladder dysfunction, often called voiding dysfunction, means the bladder and pelvic floor are not working in a coordinated way. Children may feel urgency, postpone urination, empty incompletely, or wet during the day even though there is no major anatomic blockage or neurological disease.
Common symptoms
Symptoms can include urgency, frequent urination, daytime wetting, holding maneuvers, interrupted or weak stream, straining, urinary tract infections, and bedwetting. Constipation is very commonly linked to bladder dysfunction and can make urinary symptoms much worse.
How is it diagnosed?
Evaluation starts with a detailed history, toilet habits, fluid intake, bowel pattern, and a voiding diary. Depending on the child, testing may include urinalysis, kidney and bladder ultrasound, uroflow with pelvic floor EMG, and sometimes VCUG or urodynamic studies when symptoms are complex or persistent.
Treatment options
Treatment usually begins with a bladder-bowel program: timed voiding, better hydration, regular bowel management, and relaxation of the pelvic floor during urination. Some children benefit from biofeedback therapy, medication for urgency, or short-term catheterization if bladder emptying is very poor.
Why early treatment matters
Untreated bladder dysfunction can affect quality of life and may contribute to recurrent urinary infection, reflux, and kidney stress in selected cases. Early treatment helps children regain control and prevents a long cycle of accidents, fear, and bladder overactivity.
Dr. Kallas Chemaly's approach
Dr. Kallas Chemaly treats bladder dysfunction with a step-by-step plan that looks at the bladder and bowel together. Families get a practical roadmap with toilet timing, constipation treatment, hydration goals, and follow-up testing only when the child needs it.
References
- Nationwide Children's Hospital: Voiding Dysfunction
- NIDDK: Symptoms & Causes of Bladder Control Problems
Serving families across Beirut and Mount Lebanon
Dr. Kallas Chemaly sees children from Achrafieh, Gemmayzeh, Saifi, Sodeco, Verdun, Hamra, Clemenceau, Ras Beirut, Rabieh, Mtayleb, Brummana, Beit Mery, Bikfaya, Mansourieh, Kornet Chehwan, Antelias, Dbayeh, Jounieh, Kaslik, Hazmieh, Yarze, and across Keserwan, Metn, and Baabda.