Abstract
We evaluated the effects of various intravenously administered drugs, which had been shown to influence bladder function in anesthetized and/or conscious rats, on the cystometrogram in conscious restrained-denervated rats (produced by transection of the hypogastric nerve) placed in a restraining cage in comparison to those in conscious restrained-intact rats (with the hypogastric nerve intact) placed in a restraining cage. The bladder capacity in the restrained-denervated rats was smaller than that in restrained-intact rats and did not change when they were transferred to a wide cage, but the bladder capacity of the restrained-intact rats decreased following transfer to the wide cage. Therefore, the activity of the hypogastric nerve in conscious rats appears to be stimulated by restraint. Atropine suppressed the amplitude of the micturition contraction (time to micturition in the cystometrogram). In the restrained-denervated rats, thiopental and indomethacin increased the bladder capacity at almost the same doses as those in restrained-intact rats, but it took a higher dose of morphine to increase the bladder capacity than in restrained-intact rats. These findings suggest that cystometrography in restrained-denervated rats is a useful method for evaluating the effect of a newly developed agent on bladder function without any influence from the hypogastric nerve.
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