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Expert Q&A
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| By Bruce Salzinger, D.C., CCSP Chiropractor | ||
I have heard that chiropractic care can help with bedwetting. What are your thoughts, and has anyone used this technique with good results? What is the typical time frame to see improvement if used?
The important philosophical understanding one needs to fully appreciate the chiropractic adjustment is that it is not for any specific symptoms. Your brain is your central processing unit (like a computers CPU). It communicates with your body via the spinal cord and the nerves that come off of the cord. This system (being so precious to our survival) is protected by the skull and vertebra (our backbone). Because our backbone is comprised of moving parts, giving us the ability to move in a multitude of directions, these bones can move out of place and put pressure on our central nervous system (the subluxation). Our nervous system is only 10 percent sensitive to pain! If the pressure on that system, either a stretching or pinching pressure, is not on the pain sensitive portion you would not be in pain. However, the ability of your brain to communicate with whatever organ or cell that nerve goes to would be demonstrably reduced. Eventually symptoms would ensue. They could be anything from asthma to numbness and tingling.
Bedwetting is a symptom of an underlying problem. It is possible that a subluxation might be part of that problem. I know many colleagues who have had successful outcomes with this problem. I believe the public would try chiropractic more often if they just understood how it works.
The time frame for resolution of symptoms is always difficult to predict. Each one of us has different history, genetics and mechanism of injury. Each of these would play into a time prognosis.
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- I have heard that chiropractic care can help with bedwetting. What are your thoughts, and has anyone used this technique with good results? What is the typical time frame to see improvement if used?



