Abstract

To evaluate the role of bladder afferent fibers in the hypogastric nerves (HGN) in modulation of the micturition reflex induced by chemical bladder irritation, voiding behavior, continuous cystometry, and spinal c-fos expression following intravesical acetic acid instillation were investigated in rats with or without HGN transection. Voiding behavior and continuous cystometry were examined in unanesthetized conscious rats. Following chemical bladder irritation, a significant increase in urinary frequency associated with a marked decrease in the voided volume per micturition, was noted in control rats with the intact HGN, but not in HGN-transected rats. Continuous infusion of acetic acid in control rats elicited irritative bladder responses characterized by a marked decrease in the intercontraction interval and a marked increase in maximal vesical pressure, both of which were absent in capsaicin-desensitized rats. HGN transection prevented the decrease in the intercontraction interval but not an increase in maximal vesical pressure following chemical bladder irritation. Compared with saline infusion, acetic acid infusion caused a significant increase in c-fos expression at L(1) and L(6) of the spinal cord, and HGN transection significantly reduced c-fos expression in the dorsal horn of the spinal cord at L(1) but not at L(6). These results suggest that capsaicin-sensitive bladder afferent fibers in the HGN, which travel through the rostral lumbar spinal cord, have a role in urinary frequency caused by chemical bladder irritation.

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