Literature DB >> 18551563

Potential for recovery in bladder function after removing a urethral obstruction.

K P Wolffenbuttel1, B W D de Jong, J R Scheepe, D J Kok.   

Abstract

AIMS: We examined the relation between the loss of bladder function during obstruction and the potential for recovery of function after de-obstruction.
METHODS: Guinea pigs received a partial urethral obstruction. Bladder pressure, urine flow rate, detrusor overactivity (DO), compliance and contractility were examined weekly for 2-4 weeks (short), 6-8 weeks (medium), or 9-12 weeks (long). Then the obstruction was removed and bladder function followed up to 7 weeks. The groups were compared to animals receiving only obstruction or a sham operation.
RESULTS: During obstruction the three de-obstruction groups and the obstruction group progressively lost bladder function. Flow rate remained stable, compliance decreased, pressure, contractility and DO increased. After de-obstruction the response in the three de-obstruction groups varied. In S, bladder pressure and compliance normalized, contractility initially increased then decreased towards high normal values, DO remained high normal and flow rate increased. In M, bladder pressure and DO decreased to above average normal levels. Compliance improved but did not normalize. Contractility initially stabilized, then decreased to just above the normal range. Flow-rate increased. In L, bladder pressure and DO decreased to high normal. Compliance did not improve. Contractility decreased directly after de-obstruction, stabilizing at an above normal level, flow-rate increased.
CONCLUSIONS: The potential for functional recovery decreases with increasing loss of bladder function. At all stages of bladder dysfunction, voiding pressure appears to normalize after de-obstruction. However, contractility remains high and compliance low. Such a bladder may be more vulnerable to new events of outflow obstruction than a low contractile, normal compliant bladder. (c) 2008 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18551563     DOI: 10.1002/nau.20588

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neurourol Urodyn        ISSN: 0733-2467            Impact factor:   2.696


  1 in total

1.  Augmentation Cystoplasty of Diseased Porcine Bladders with Bi-Layer Silk Fibroin Grafts.

Authors:  Saif Affas; Frank-Mattias Schäfer; Khalid Algarrahi; Vivian Cristofaro; Maryrose P Sullivan; Xuehui Yang; Kyle Costa; Bryan Sack; Mehrnaz Gharaee-Kermani; Jill A Macoska; Gokhan Gundogdu; Catherine Seager; Carlos R Estrada; Joshua R Mauney
Journal:  Tissue Eng Part A       Date:  2018-10-26       Impact factor: 3.845

  1 in total

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