Richka...
I don't think it's scoliosis. Incontinence caused by nerve damage in the spine usually results in incontinence in all situations, not just "key in lock" incontinence. Check out urge incontinence. For example:
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/257260-overview
Regards,
Linda
I don't think it's scoliosis. Incontinence caused by nerve damage in the spine usually results in incontinence in all situations, not just "key in lock" incontinence. Check out urge incontinence. For example:
http://emedicine.medscape.com/article/257260-overview
Regards,
Linda
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