Can a patient with cerebral hemorrhage recover from incontinence?

Whether or not a patient with cerebral hemorrhage can recover from incontinence depends on the severity of the disease, whether the treatment is timely and appropriate, whether the patient’s compliance is good, and whether there are serious complications.
If the extent of cerebral hemorrhage is small, the incontinence symptoms are mild, the treatment is timely and appropriate, the patient has good compliance, and there are no serious complications such as urinary tract infections and cognitive disorders, the incontinence will usually be improved or even cured to a certain extent after active intervention.
If the scope of cerebral hemorrhage is large, involving the urinary and defecation centers, the incontinence symptoms are serious, the treatment is not timely, the treatment method is inappropriate, the patient’s compliance is poor, and there are serious complications such as confusion, etc., the patient’s incontinence generally has a poorer prognosis, or even can not be cured, and is accompanied by a lifelong incontinence.
Whether or not a patient with cerebral hemorrhage can recover from incontinence is determined by a number of factors, which need to be analyzed specifically and cannot be generalized.