Age-related changes in urethrovesical coordination in male rats: relationship with bladder instability?

Author:

Lluel P.1,Deplanne V.1,Heudes D.2,Bruneval P.2,Palea S.1

Affiliation:

1. Sanofi∼Synthélabo Recherche, Internal Medicine Department, Rueil-Malmaison, 94255 Gentilly cedex; and

2. Institut National de la Santé et de la Recherche Médicale Unité 430, Hopital Broussais, 75014 Paris, France

Abstract

The micturition profile in conscious animals and the urethrovesical coordination in anesthetized conditions were investigated in 6- and 24-mo-old male Sprague-Dawley rats. The in vitro pharmacological responses to KCl, electrical field stimulation (EFS), carbachol, phenylephrine, and isoprenaline were determined in the isolated bladder body, the bladder neck, and urethra. A morphometric and immunohistological study has been included. During conscious cystomanometry, 63% of the aging rats but only 25% of the adult rats showed spontaneous contractions during the bladder-filling phase. In conscious aging rats, basal pressure, threshold pressure, and micturition pressure were also significantly increased. In anesthetized aging rats, a decrease in resting urethral pressure at micturition threshold and the occurrence of a significant delay in urethral relaxation during micturition were associated with an increased residual volume. In all isolated tissues, contractile response to KCl was not modified with aging, whereas age-related decreases in maximal responses to carbachol in the bladder body and to phenylephrine and carbachol in the urethra were observed. In the bladder neck only, we found a significant decrease in the amplitude of neurogenic contractions associated with fibrosis but without decrease in nerve density. These experiments show significant modifications in the voiding pattern of aging rats associated with urethral dysfunction and with regionally specific pharmacological and structural changes of the urinary tract. We propose that aging in rats is characterized by an impairment of the urethrovesical coordination, leading to bladder dysfunctions similar to those induced by bladder outlet obstruction.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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