The Link Between Childhood Bedwetting and Breathing During Sleep

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An Airway-Focused Perspective on Bedwetting Treatment | Bedwetting and Sleep Apnea

Chester, United States - April 21, 2026 / Chester Dental Care /

CHESTER, VA, March 26, 2026For many parents, childhood bedwetting is a problem they quietly endure. Alarms, fluid restrictions, and reward charts become part of the nightly routine. Yet for a growing number of families, none of it works. Chester Dental Care is raising awareness about a connection that most parents never hear from their pediatrician: bedwetting in children may be a sign of sleep-disordered breathing.

A Common Problem With an Overlooked Cause

Bedwetting, known medically as nocturnal enuresis, affects millions of children in the United States each year. It is often treated as a developmental phase. But the reasons for bedwetting can go deeper than bladder maturation or habit.

Research published in The Journal of Pediatrics found that 41% of children referred to a sleep center for suspected sleep-disordered breathing were also actively wetting the bed, at rates far higher than children without breathing issues.

Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) includes snoring, mouth breathing, and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA). When a child's airway becomes partially blocked during sleep, the brain shifts its focus to restoring oxygen. Normal signals between the brain and bladder get interrupted. The body also produces more urine during these events due to hormonal changes. The result is bedwetting that does not respond to standard solutions.

Why Standard Bedwetting Solutions Fall Short

Most families try the same short list of bedwetting solutions. Bedwetting alarms, cutting off fluids after dinner, and scheduled night waking are common starting points. Medications to reduce nighttime urine production are sometimes prescribed.

These approaches can provide short-term relief. But when sleep-disordered breathing is the root cause, they do not fix the problem. The bedwetting tends to return.

Up to 80% of children with persistent bedwetting also have obstructive sleep apnea, according to data reviewed by sleep health researchers. That figure points to how often the airway connection goes undetected when families and providers are focused on bladder-based bedwetting treatment.

What Parents Should Watch For

Children with sleep-disordered breathing do not always snore loudly. Some signs are subtle. Parents should take note if their child:

  • Breathes through the mouth during sleep

  • Sleeps in unusual positions, such as with the neck extended

  • Wakes up tired despite a full night in bed

  • Has trouble focusing or sitting still during the day

  • Shows crowded or misaligned teeth

When these signs appear alongside bedwetting, a provider with airway training can help determine whether breathing is a contributing factor.

An Airway-Focused Perspective on Bedwetting Treatment

Chester Dental Care, an airway-focused dental practice serving Chester and nearby areas, works with families to look beyond the surface symptoms. When sleep-disordered breathing is identified as a contributing factor, the practice coordinates with physicians and sleep specialists to build a care plan that addresses the root cause.

"Many families come to us after years of trying to manage bedwetting with no lasting results," said Dr. Shwetha Rodrigues of Chester Dental Care. "Once we look at how a child is breathing at night, the picture becomes much clearer. Bedwetting is often one of several signs that the airway needs attention."

Contact Information

Ready to find real answers? Call Chester Dental Care at (804) 748-2555 or email frontdesk@chesterdentalcareva.com to schedule an evaluation and finally understand how to stop bedwetting for good.

About Chester Dental Care

Chester Dental Care is a local dental practice in Chester, VA, with nearly two decades of dental experience and close to a decade focused on airway and sleep dentistry. The practice serves families across Chester, Richmond, Chesterfield, Midlothian, Hopewell, and nearby areas of Virginia. Chester Dental Care takes a collaborative approach to care, working alongside physicians and specialists to address the connection between oral health, airway function, and overall wellness.

Contact Information:

Chester Dental Care

12517 Jefferson Davis Highway
Chester, VA 23831
United States

Shwetha Rodrigues
https://chesterdentalcareva.com/

Original Source: https://chesterdentalcareva.com/blog/an-airway-focused-perspective-on-bedwetting-treatment-bedwetting-and-sleep-apnea