Purpose: To see whether a recently characterized model of bacterial toxin-induced urinary bladder inflammation (Stein et al., J. Urol. 155, 1133-1138, 1996) is associated with detrusor hyperreflexia, and whether endogenous tachykinins acting through NK2 or NK1 receptors were involved in this model.
Materials And Methods: The bladder of urethane-anesthetized male Wistar rats was cannulated through the dome. Intravesical administration of protamine sulfate (PS, 10 mg./ml./rat) or vehicle for 1 hour was followed by the intravesical administration of E. coli lipopolysaccharide (LPS, 1 mg./ml./rat) or vehicle for 1 hour. Cystometries (50 microl./min.) were performed 3.5 hours after the exposure to LPS. MEN 11,420, a peptide tachykinin NK2 receptor antagonist, was administered before cystometries or, in a separate group of animals, during cystometries. The effect of SR 140,333, a non-peptide NK1 receptor antagonist, was also assessed in the presence or absence of MEN 11,420. The urodynamic effects of PS + LPS were also tested in capsaicin-pretreated rats.
Results: Unlike PS or LPS alone, the intravesical administration of PS + LPS induced detrusor hyperreflexia. In PS + LPS treated animals during nonstop cystometries, the intermicturition interval was decreased by about 50% as compared to vehicle-pretreated rats. A quantitatively similar reduction in the bladder capacity was also observed. MEN 11,420 (100 nmol./kg., i.v.) restored the intermicturition interval in PS + LPS-pretreated rats at the level of controls by increasing the bladder capacity, whereas it had no effect in vehicle-pretreated rats. SR 140,333 (1 micromol./kg., i.v.) neither modified urodynamic parameters in controls and in PS + LPS-treated rats nor altered the effect of MEN 11,420 in these groups. Capsaicin pretreatment (164 micromol./kg., s.c., 4-5 days before) induced a two-fold increase of the bladder capacity in control rats and prevented PS + LPS-induced bladder hyperreflexia.
Conclusions: The intravesical administration of PS + LPS produces the activation of capsaicin-sensitive afferents. Endogenous tachykinins released from these fibers act through NK2 receptors to induce detrusor hyperreflexia.
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Exp Neurol
April 2024
Department of Urology, Jiangsu Province Hospital of Chinese Medicine, Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, Nanjing, Jiangsu Province, China. Electronic address:
Spinal cord injury often results in chronic loss of micturition control, which is featured by bladder hyperreflexia and detrusor sphincter dyssynergia. Previous studies showed that treatment of capsaicin reduces non-voiding bladder contractions in multiple animal injury models and human patients. However, its underlying neural mechanisms remain largely unknown.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZhen Ci Yan Jiu
October 2023
College of Acupuncture-moxibustion, Tuina and Rehabilitation, Hunan University of Chinese Medicine, Changsha 410208, China.
Objectives: To observe the effect of electroacupuncture (EA) on urodynamics and Raf/MEK/ERK signaling pathway in spine cord tissue of rats after suprasacral spinal cord injury (SSCI), so as to explore its possible mechanism in improving bladder function in rats with detrusor hyperreflexia after SSCI.
Methods: Female SD rats were randomly divided into blank, sham operation, model, EA and EA+PD98059 groups, with 12 rats in each group. Thorax (T) 10 spinal cord transection was performed by surgery.
Res Rep Urol
July 2023
Department of Renal and Urologic Surgery, Asahikawa Medical University, Asahikawa, Japan.
Purpose: In this study, we investigated skeletal muscle loss and bladder dysfunction caused by high-fat/high-sucrose (HFS) diet.
Methods: Twelve-week-old Sprague-Dawley (SD) female rats were fed on normal (Group N) or HFS (Group HFS) diet for 12 weeks. We conducted urodynamic investigation and pharmacologic in vitro.
J Neurotrauma
May 2023
Department of Neurosciences, Lerner Research Institute, Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio, USA.
Spinal cord injury (SCI) above the lumbosacral level often leads to dysfunction of the lower urinary tract (LUT) including detrusor hyper-reflexia, wherein bladder compliance is low, baseline pressures are increased, and filling is accompanied by numerous non-voiding contractions (NVCs) referred to as neurogenic detrusor overactivity. Here, we investigate the expression levels of the serotonin 1A (5-HT) receptor in segments both rostral and caudal to the injured site, as well as the effects on micturition of blocking 5-HT receptor using pharmacological interventions in spinally intact rats or T8 complete SCI rats. The activities of detrusor and external urethral sphincter (EUS) were assessed with the rats in a conscious condition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurotrauma Rep
December 2021
Marion Murray Spinal Cord Research Center, Department of Neurobiology & Anatomy, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Traumatic spinal cord injury (SCI) often leads to urinary dysfunction. Although an involuntary micturition reflex can be established to elicit voiding with time, complications arise in the form of bladder hyper-reflexia and detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia that cause incontinence and inefficient expulsion of urine. To date, the neuronal mechanisms that underlie regulation of micturition after SCI are not well understood.
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