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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Urological research 26 (1998), S. 325-330 
    ISSN: 1434-0879
    Keywords: Key words Urinary bladder ; Obstruction ; Hypertrophy ; Cystometry ; Atropine ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The urodynamic effects of an experimental, partial infravesical outlet obstruction in rats were studied and compared with the effects in sham-operated controls, and in animals that had undergone 24 h of total outlet obstruction. The animals were studied up to 42 days after surgery. Bladder weight increased with time in the partially obstructed group to reach a final value of 6 times that of the control. In water loading experiments micturition volume was unaffected by sham operation. In the partially obstructed bladders it decreased initially but normalized with time. In the group that had undergone 24 h of total obstruction micturition volume also decreased initially but then became significantly higher than in the controls. In cystometry experiments the partially obstructed bladders developed a considerable residual urine and increased threshold and micturition pressures. Detrusor instability was present already after 10 days. Also in the cystometry experiments the bladders that had been totally obstructed for 24 h had increased micturition volumes. Residual volume was only slightly affected by atropine in the control and partially obstructed bladders but increased 7-fold in rats in which the bladder had been totally obstructed for 24 h 42 days previously. We conclude that there is a close relationship between bladder weight, residual volume and micturition pressure in the partially obstructed bladder, and that 24 h of total obstruction results in disturbances of bladder function that might be related to denervation phenomena previously reported by others.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Urological research 26 (1998), S. 291-297 
    ISSN: 1434-0879
    Keywords: Key words Urinary bladder ; Rat ; Pelvic ganglion ; Innervation ; Denervation ; Plasticity ; Age
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract We evaluated the degree of neuronal plasticity following a partial denervation of the rat urinary bladder. Using acetylcholinesterase staining we found that the postganglionic nerves from the pelvic ganglion reach the intact bladder as 1–4 nerve trunks on each side, slightly ventral and caudal to the ureteral orifices. Normally a few thinner nerves also reach the bladder posterolateral to the ureterovesical junction. The nerves ventral to the ureters run in the ventral longitudinal muscle layer as well-defined trunks with a pattern that does not differ much from one animal to another. The nerves reaching the bladder dorsolaterally innervate the dorsolateral aspects in a more irregular fashion. Some anastomoses are found across the midline between nerves from either side. This nerve pattern is already in place in newborn rats. After removal of the pelvic ganglion on one side in the adult rat the ipsilateral ventral nerves rapidly degenerate, whereas some dorsolateral␣nerves usually survive. Axons from the intact ventral␣nerves can be seen crossing over to the denervated side in the anastomoses. After 13 weeks the surviving ventral nerves, which normally run at some distance from the ventral midline, now run in the midline with equal amounts of ventral longitudinal muscle on either side, and with their branches evenly distributed to both sides. The same pattern is seen after 27 weeks. Unilateral ganglionectomy in 3-week-old rats leads to the same changes in nerve distribution as in the adult rat. We conclude that there is a high degree of plasticity in the bladder innervation following a partial denervation, and that this plasticity includes the distribution of its main intramural nerve trunks.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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