Abstract

At the lumbosacral spinal cord level in the rat, substance P-positive neurons are present in dense concentration in the dorsal horn and the sacral parasympathetic nucleus. We undertook the present study to investigate the effect of intrathecal substance P (10 μg at the L 6-S 1 level) on urinary bladder and urethral sphincteric activity and to compare these effects with those of intravenous and intra-arterial administration. Three different bladder pressure responses were triggered by intrathecal substance P: (A) an immediate, strong bladder contraction ( n = 5); (B) augmentation of the micturition reflex, as indicated by strong detrusor contractions in response to intravesical saline perfusion ( n = 4); and (C) a slow, gradual increase to a high, steady peak ( n = 8). The sphincteric electromyographic (EMG) activity was consistently increased. When substance P was given intravenously ( n = 10) and intra-arterially ( n = 3), the form, duration, and maximal amplitude of bladder contractions (owing to a direct smooth-muscle action) were comparable with those of Group A. The effects in intrathecal Groups B and C suggest that substance P provides a tonic influence on motor horn cells and on the preganglionic neurons in the sacral parasympathetic nucleus at the lumbosacral spinal cord level, where neuronal circuits controlling bladder and sphincteric activity are located.

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