The contribution of sensory nerves to xylene-induced cystitis in rats.

Neuroscience

Pharmacology Department, A. Menarini, Pharmaceuticals, Florence, Italy.

Published: August 1988

AI Article Synopsis

  • * In adult rats desensitized to capsaicin, bladder reflexes were initially affected after xylene exposure but returned to near-normal levels after 24 hours, indicating a time-dependent recovery effect.
  • * Newborn rats desensitized to capsaicin showed a significant reduction in bladder reflexes and response to xylene, suggesting that the early developmental exposure to capsaicin influences nerve sensitivity and bladder responses.

Article Abstract

The role of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves of the rat urinary bladder in xylene-induced cystitis was investigated. Instillation of xylene into the urinary bladder of female rats induced cystitis, e.g. detrusor hyperreflexia and increased vascular permeability. Detrusor hyperreflexia was also observed in rats desensitized to capsaicin as adults (50-125 mg/kg s.c., 4 days before) but only for a short period (1 h) after instillation. When a longer time lag (24 h) was allowed to elapse following instillation, reflex micturition was almost abolished. In rats desensitized to capsaicin as newborns (50 mg/kg s.c. on second day of life) reflex micturition was almost abolished and xylene (given 1 h before measurement) was ineffective. The xylene-induced plasma extravasation was greater in the bladder neck than in the dome. In the bladder neck the "early" response to xylene was reduced but not abolished in rats densensitized to capsaicin as adults or pretreated with compound 48/80 and was abolished in rats desensitized to capsaicin as newborns. The bladder content of substance P-like immunoreactivity decreased at various times following xylene instillation but this change occurred in parallel to the increase in bladder weight. These findings indicate that xylene-induced cystitis involves, at least in part, an irritation of capsaicin-sensitive sensory nerves in the bladder wall. The present results further suggest that xylene acts by stimulating at least two populations of sensory nerves which differ in their sensitivity towards capsaicin.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/0306-4522(88)90176-5DOI Listing

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