86 research outputs found
Effect of partial urethral obstruction on force development of the guinea pig bladder
We created gradual partial urethral obstruction in 20 guinea pigs using silver jeweler's jump rings. After 4 or 8 weeks obstruction all animals underwent cystometry and were assigned to one of five urodynamic categories: normal, high pressure voiding, unstable, low compliance, or decompensated. After sacrifice, the contractile responses of bladder strips to electrical field stimulation of intramural nerves, direct electrical muscle stimulation, 0.1 mM carbachol, and high K + solution were sampled by computer for phase plot analysis. Following 8 weeks obstruction, the value of the phase plot parameter Fiso, indicative of the number of contractile muscle units, was reduced to 60% of the control response to nerve stimulation (P < 0.05) and to 77% of the control response to carbachol stimulation (P < 0.05). Parameter C, the slope of the phase plot (indicative of unit recruitment during force development), was unchanged for all forms of stimulation. Although in the latter case not statistically significant, obstruction affected responses to nerve and muscle stimulation similarly suggesting that muscle change may possibly be a common denominator of dysfunction. In view of the reduction in Fiso and the increase in bladder weight, instability may represent a more advanced form of dysfunction due to obstruction than high pressure voiding
Muslim Integration into Western Cultures: Between Origins and Destinations
Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/91196/1/j.1467-9248.2012.00951.x.pd
Basic mechanisms of urgency: roles and benefits of pharmacotherapy
Introduction
Since urgency is key to the overactive bladder syndrome, we have reviewed the mechanisms underlying how bladder filling and urgency are sensed, what causes urgency and how this relates to medical therapy.
Materials and methods
Review of published literature.
Results
As urgency can only be assessed in cognitively intact humans, mechanistic studies of urgency often rely on proxy or surrogate parameters, such as detrusor overactivity, but these may not necessarily be reliable. There is an increasing evidence base to suggest that the sensation of ‘urgency’ differs from the normal physiological urge to void upon bladder filling. While the relative roles of alterations in afferent processes, central nervous processing, efferent mechanisms and in intrinsic bladder smooth muscle function remain unclear, and not necessarily mutually exclusive, several lines of evidence support an important role for the latter.
Conclusions
A better understanding of urgency and its causes may help to develop more effective treatments for voiding dysfunction
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