Publication | Closed Access
Pathophysiology of Idiopathic Detrusor Instability and Detrusor Hyper‐reflexia
120
Citations
10
References
1987
Year
Muscle strips from urodynamically normal bladders and from bladders exhibiting idiopathic detrusor instability or detrusor hyper-reflexia were compared under isometric conditions in an organ bath. Spontaneous contractions developed more often in unstable and hyper-reflexic muscle and were of greater amplitude, frequency and basal tension. Electrical field stimulation caused a frequency-dependent contraction which was largely abolished by both tetrodotoxin (TTX) and atropine in all three muscle types. Comparison of their frequency response curves demonstrated a significantly greater sensitivity than that of unstable and hyper-reflexic muscle to low stimulation frequencies. Acetylcholine caused a dose-related contractile response in all muscle types. There were no significant differences between the dose response curves of unstable and hyper-reflexic muscle, and those of normal muscle. The results suggest that the pathophysiology of the involuntary detrusor contraction is common to both idiopathic detrusor instability and detrusor hyper-reflexia and that this is related to a disorder of an intrinsic neuromodulatory mechanism within the detrusor muscle.
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