| Literature DB >> 32699638 |
Laure Bastide1, Anne-Geneviève Herbaut1.
Abstract
AIMS: Micturition depends on a complex voluntary and involuntarily neuronal network located at various levels of the nervous system. The mechanism is highly dependent on the hierarchical organization of central nervous system pathways. If the role of the cortex and brainstem centres is well established, the role of other subcortical areas structures, such as the cerebellum is poorly understood. We are interested in discussing the current knowledge on the role of cerebellum in micturition.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebellum; Micturition; Neural control of lower urinary tract; Urinary bladder; Urination
Year: 2020 PMID: 32699638 PMCID: PMC7368785 DOI: 10.1186/s40673-020-00119-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum Ataxias ISSN: 2053-8871
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of studies on the cerebellum role in micturition
Experimental animal studies
| Author, year | Aim | Method | Urodynamic | Cerebellum effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Modulation of reflex micturition | Electrostimulation of fastigial nucleus, pelvic and pudendal nerves in decerebrate cats and ablation of the cerebellar anterior lobe | Cystometry during filling phase | Tonic depressant effect on micturition reflex which is organized in the pontine mesencephalic reticular formation. Stimulation of pudendal and pelvic nerves afferents demonstrated a bilateral projection to the anterior and posterior vermis. | |
| Modulation of bladder mobility | Electrostimulation of fastigial nucleus in cats and after infusion of guanethidin (sympatholytic drug). | Cystometry during filling phase | Inhibition of the bladder mobility induced by saline filling. Suppression of the efferent parasympathetic discharge by a possibly inhibitory action at the spinal level | |
| Modulation of reflex micturition | Electrostimulation of fastigial nucleus in cats with bladder outlet occluded | Cystometry during filling phase | Fastigial inhibitory influences on the spinal parasympathetic reflexes controlling bladder | |
| Modulation of reflex micturition | Cerebellectomy in decerebrate dog | Cystometry and EMG of the urethral sphincter | Inhibitory role in the collecting phase and a facilitator role in the emptying phase. | |
| Micturition cycle and change in brain metabolism | PET study in rats | Cystometry | Hypometabolism in the rigth cerebellum during volume-induced voiding or isovolumetric bladder contraction |
Functional brain imaging studies
| Empty bladder | Filling phase | Voiding phase | First desire | Urge to void | Pelvic floor control | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| None | Griffiths 2005 Sakakibara 2004 Kitta 2006 | Sakakibara 2004 Dasgupta 2005 | Seseke 2006 Seseke 2008 | Blok 1997 | ||
| None | Matsuura 2002 (L) Athwal 2001 (B) | Kuhtz-Buschbeck 2005 (L) | Zhang 2005 (R) | |||
| None | Nour 2000 | Nour 2000 | Blok 2006 Di Gangi Herms 2006 (L) | Seseke 2006 Seseke 2008 | ||
| None | Herzog 2008 Hruz 2007 Mehnert 2008 Pontari 2010 | Shy 2014 | Takao 2008 |
Abbreviation: L = left; R = right; B = both
Anatomo-clinical correlation studies
| Author, year | Study design | Urinary symptoms | Urodynamic-EMG | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Retrospective case-control study of 8 patients with cerebellar mutism syndrome after a surgical lesion of midline cerebellum | UI 63% | Not available | ||||
| Prospective, 30 patients with pure cerebellar syndrome | UI 77% (23 on 30 patients) | Overactive bladder without dyssynergia 78% (18 on 23 patients) Overactive bladder with dyssynergia 22% (5 on 23 patients) Reduced sensitivity threshold 100% PVR > 100 mL 13% (3 on 23 patients) | ||||
| Retrospective, 75 patients affected by pure or heredodegenerative cerebellum injuries | UI 84% Frequency-nocturia 73% Dysuria 18% | Overactive bladder without dyssynergia 79% Overactive bladder with dyssynergia 3% Non-inhibited detrusor contraction 19% | ||||
| Prospective, 9 patients with spinocerebellar ataxia 6 | UI 33% Frequency-nocturia 44% Urgenturia 22% Dysuria 11% | DO 11% | DU 22% | DSD 0% | Mild chronic denervation 63% | |
| Retrospective, 15 patients with cerebellar stroke | UI and emptying symptoms 40% Urgenturia 67% Dysuria 60% Urinary retention 27% Residual urine sensation 87% | DO 53% | DU 27% | DSD 40% | Non-relaxing US 47% | |
Abbreviations: UI = urinary incontinence; PVR = post-void residual; DO = Detrusor Overactivity; DU = Detrusor Underactivity; DSD: Detrusor- Sphincter Dyssynergia; US = Urethral Sphincter
Fig. 2The first part is a schematic representation of the lower urinary tract control showing the voiding reflex (black arrows; Sa: sacral parasympathetic; ON: Onulf nucleus) under brainstem structures in green (PAG: periaqueductal grey; PMC pontine micturition center), forebrain structures in red (SMA: supplementary motor area; dACC: dorsal anterior cingulate cortex) involved in the perception of the desire to void circuit (blue arrows) and the urgency (red arrow). Possible, unidirectional, bidirectional connections of the cerebellum with these structures are showed by purple links and arrows. The second part (below) represents different phases of micturition with the action of the cerebellum when it is known or suggested by the animal experiments, anatomo-clinical studies or the clinical urodynamics results in patients with “pure” cerebellar disorders, and its anatomical activation when it is noticed by the experimental neuroimaging studies. (Produced with the help of the figures of references [1, 39])