SSuyeong CheongdamUrology · Busan
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Women's & Pediatric Clinic

Pediatric & Adolescent Urology in Busan, Korea

Children and teenagers have their own urological concerns — bedwetting, foreskin problems, urinary infections, undescended testes, and questions about growth and development. Most are common, rarely serious, and respond well to a calm, appropriate approach.

Gentle, child-friendlyNon-invasive tests firstGrowth check clinic
TL;DR — quick answer

Children and teenagers have their own urological concerns — bedwetting, foreskin problems, urinary infections, undescended testes, and questions about growth and development. Most are common, rarely serious, and respond well to a calm, appropriate approach.

Overview

Children and teenagers have their own urological concerns — bedwetting, foreskin problems, urinary infections, undescended testes, and questions about growth and development. Most are common, rarely serious, and respond well to a calm, appropriate approach.

The clinic runs a urologic growth check for children and adolescents, and prioritises a gentle, non-frightening visit with clear explanations for both child and parent.

Symptoms & signs

  • Bedwetting beyond age 5–6, or returning after being dry
  • Daytime urgency, frequency or wetting
  • A tight, red or sore foreskin
  • A testicle not felt in the scrotum
  • Painful urination or repeated infections
  • Parental questions about growth and development

Causes & risk factors

  • Delayed maturation of bladder–brain signalling (bedwetting)
  • A tight or non-retractile foreskin in young boys
  • Undescended or retractile testes
  • Urinary infections
  • Constipation, which commonly worsens bladder symptoms
Our approach

How we care for pediatric & adolescent urology

A clear, step-by-step pathway — with same-day testing wherever possible, and kind, attentive care.

Gentle history & exam

We talk with child and parent and examine carefully and reassuringly.

Non-invasive tests

A simple urine test and, where needed, painless ultrasound.

Growth check

A urologic growth check assesses development where parents have concerns.

Conservative first

Structured programs for bedwetting and foreskin care; surgery only when genuinely indicated.

Good to know

Most childhood urological problems — occasional bedwetting, a tight foreskin in a young boy — resolve with time, hygiene and a conservative plan, and rarely need surgery. Managing constipation, which quietly worsens many bladder symptoms in children, is often an overlooked first step.

Why Suyeong Cheongdam

Care with a difference

Children are seen patiently and without unnecessary invasive testing here, with clear English explanations for parents, by a board-certified urologist. Conservative care comes first, and surgery is reserved for genuine indications.

Sources: American Urological Association (AUA) and European Association of Urology (EAU) clinical guidance; Korean Urological Association. Educational information only — not a substitute for in-person evaluation by a physician.
Frequently asked

Questions from foreign patients

Occasional bedwetting is normal up to about age 5–6. Beyond that, or if a dry child starts again, an evaluation is reasonable and usually reassuring.

Usually not in young boys — it often resolves with time and hygiene. Surgery is reserved for specific, repeated problems.

An assessment of urological development for children and adolescents where parents have concerns about growth or development.

The core tests — a urine test and ultrasound — are non-invasive and painless.