Abstract

Saphenous (SAFN) nerve stimulation was recently shown in anesthetized rats to elicit bladder-inhibitory responses in a frequency-dependent manner; however, the mechanism of action is unknown. The goal of this study was to investigate the potential role of the hypogastric nerve (HGN) in this inhibitory pathway by examining stimulation-evoked changes in bladder function under four different experimental conditions: (1) HGN intact, saline infusion (HGNi-s), (2) HGN transected, saline infusion (HGNt-s), (3) HGN intact, acetic acid (AA) infusion (HGNi-a), and (4) HGN transected, AA infusion (HGNt-a). Experiments were conducted in 33 urethane-anesthetized female rats, where continuous bladder infusion was provided through a suprapubic catheter. The experimental protocol involved two, 40-min stimulation trials in which electrical pulses were applied to the SAFN at a set frequency (10Hz) and two different amplitudes (50μA and 100μA). In all experimental groups, SAFN stimulation resulted in complete suppression of bladder activity with an incidence rate of 25% to 50%. However, significant changes in the measured urodynamic changes (e.g., basal pressure, contraction amplitude, and inter-contraction interval) were found only in the HGNt-a animals. Our findings suggest that the HGN does not mediate the inhibitory effects of SAFN stimulation and that bladder inhibition is achieved through a different mechanism of action.

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