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Micturitional Reflexes in Chronic Spinalized Cats: The Underactive Detrusor and Detrusor‐Sphincter Dyssynergia
Author(s) -
Galeano César,
Jubelin Bruno,
Germain Louis,
Guenette Lilianne
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
neurourology and urodynamics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.918
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1520-6777
pISSN - 0733-2467
DOI - 10.1002/nau.1930050108
Subject(s) - dyssynergia , medicine , reflex , urethral sphincter , urination , urology , detrusor muscle , pudendal nerve , urethra , anesthesia , sphincter , urinary bladder , anatomy , urinary system
We studied micturitional reflexes in 46 unanesthetized adult male cats spinalized at C5‐C6 17 to 125 days previously and in eight intact central nervous system chloralosed cats that were used as controls. Urethral pressure profiles, cystosphincterograms with the urethrovesical junction opened and closed, and mechanograms of detrusor and circular and longitudinal urethral muscles were performed. The effect of vesical, urethral, pelvic, or pudendal anesthesia and vesical and urethral mechanical stimulation were studied. Our results suggest that spinalization produces two major types of neurourologic disorders: (1) weakness of detrusor contractor reflexes (vesicovesical and urethrovesical contraction reflexes) and (2) exaggeration of urethral contractor reflexes (urethrourethral contraction reflex, guarding reflex). Secondarily the weakness of detrusor contractions diminishes the efficiency of the urethral reflex relaxation needed for voiding (vesicourethral relaxation reflex). Because of these abnormalities, two main syndromes appear: (1) underactive detrusor function and (2) detrusor sphincter dyssynergia. Isolated peripheral manipulations of the bladder or urethra do not improve micturition: (1) increase in detrusor contraction strength induces detrusor sphincter dyssynergia, and (2) relaxation of the external sphincter facilitates voiding, but urinary retention persists. It is proposed that spinalization produces a central micturitional dysreflexia responsible for the peripheral dysfunction, and treatment must be oriented toward the central dysreflexia rather than the peripheral dysfunction.

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