Deafferentation of the Urinary Bladder and Implantation of a Sacral Anterior Root Stimulator (SARS) for Treatment of the Neurogenic Bladder in Paraplegic Patients / Deafferentation der Harnblase und Implantation von sakralen Vorderwurzelstimulatoren (SARS) zur Behandlung der neurogenen Blase bei querschnittgelähmten Patienten

2004 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 88-92 ◽  
Author(s):  
C Seif ◽  
K.-P Jünemann ◽  
P. M Braun
1999 ◽  
Vol 277 (3) ◽  
pp. R786-R794 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen-Li Cheng ◽  
Jiang-Chuan Liu ◽  
Sun-Yran Chang ◽  
Cheng-Ping Ma ◽  
William C. de Groat

The effect of capsaicin (10–80 mg/kg sc) on reflex activity of the urinary bladder was examined in anesthetized normal as well as anesthetized and awake chronic spinal cord-injured (SCI) cats. In normal cats, capsaicin elicited a transient increase in the frequency of isovolumetric bladder contractions and reduced the volume threshold for inducing micturition, but did not depress the amplitude of bladder contractions or the reflex firing on bladder nerves. In anesthetized SCI cats, capsaicin depressed reflex bladder activity and firing on bladder nerves. In awake SCI cats, capsaicin initially decreased the volume threshold for inducing micturition; however, after a delay of 3–6 h the volume threshold increased and intravesical voiding pressure decreased. This effect persisted for 4–12 days. It is concluded that capsaicin-sensitive C fiber bladder afferents are not involved in initiating reflex micturition in normal cats, but play an essential role in triggering automatic micturition in chronic SCI cats. The results are consistent with the clinical data indicating that C fiber bladder afferents contribute to bladder hyperactivity and incontinence in patients with neurogenic bladder dysfunction.


2007 ◽  
Vol 28 (6) ◽  
pp. 287-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimio SUGAYA ◽  
Tomohiro ONAGA ◽  
Saori NISHIJIMA ◽  
Minoru MIYAZATO ◽  
Yoshinori OSHIRO ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 28 (4) ◽  
pp. 647-655 ◽  
Author(s):  
X. Li ◽  
T. Guan ◽  
W.-J. Huang ◽  
C.-H. Liang

ABSTRACTThe clinical urination assist measures are usually taken to overcome the neurogenic bladder difficult to cure, but easily cause patients bladder stones, urinary system infection and other complications. To solve the problem of the urination assist of neurogenic bladder, a bladder power pump (BPP) driven by external electromagnet was proposed in this study according to the structure and micturition mechanism of human urinary bladder. The mathematic models of the BPP were established based on the theories of electromagnetics and fluid dynamics. A simulated experiment system with a bladder physical model for simulating human urinary system was designed according to the similarity criterion of fluid dynamincs. The micturition performance of the BPP was investigated by simulation and experiment. The results showed that the intravesical pressure and urine flow rate of the bladder physical model can be controlled by adjusting electromagnet exciting current. The micturition performance of the BPP is basically accordant with that of human urinary bladder detrusor. The established mathematic models are simple and practicable, which can provide the theoretical guidance for the performance analysis and structural optimization design of the BPP.


2020 ◽  
Vol 7 (3) ◽  
pp. 908
Author(s):  
Vinodh Duraisamy ◽  
Mishall Prasannan ◽  
Maniselvi Swamidurai ◽  
Kannan Ross

Pneumoperitoneum is abnormal presence of air or any other gas in the peritoneal cavity. This finding can be both benign or a sign of a grave underlying pathology and a wide spectrum of clinical conditions can attribute to the finding. Prompt clinical examination of a case of abdominal pain can identify findings of peritonitis. We are reporting an interesting case report about a patient of acute abdomen with pneumoperitoneum and peritonitis which was caused by spontaneous rupture of urinary bladder. A 36-year-old male, came with complaints of abdominal pain for one day, two episodes of non-bilious vomiting. He was a known case of neurogenic bladder on continuous bladder drainage. Systemic examination of the abdomen showed warmth, diffuse tenderness, guarding and absent bowel sounds. Bladder catheterisation showed clear urine. On investigation, He had pneumoperitoneum in chest X-ray and free fluid in ultrasonography. A clinical diagnosis of hollow viscus perforation was made and emergency laparotomy was done in view of signs of peritonitis. There was rupture of the dome of urinary bladder with necrosis of the bladder wall and extravasation of urine into the peritoneal cavity. This rare presentation should remind us to keep all the differential diagnoses in mind while opening a case of perforation peritonitis as timely intervention can well and truly be the difference between life and death.


2016 ◽  
Vol 2016 ◽  
pp. 1-3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pradeep V. Mahajan ◽  
Swetha Subramanian ◽  
Amit Danke ◽  
Anand Kumar

The normal function of the urinary bladder is to store and expel urine in a coordinated, controlled fashion, the activity of which is regulated by the central and peripheral nervous systems. Neurogenic bladder is a term applied to a malfunctioning urinary bladder due to neurologic dysfunction or insult emanating from internal or external trauma, disease, or injury. This report describes a case of neurogenic bladder following laminectomy procedure and long-standing diabetes mellitus with neuropathy treated with autologous cellular therapy. The differentiation potential and paracrine effects of mesenchymal stem cells on bladder function have been highlighted.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Péter Járomi

The microcirculatory aspects of inflammatory disorders are of importance in the pathology of the urinary system. Our first aim was to perform a comparative analysis of the microcirculatory responses of the urinary bladder in infectious and non-infectious inflammatory animal models with direct or indirect endothelial damage. To this end, we compared the local microcirculatory consequences of experimental interstitial (IC) cystitis and hemorrhagic cystitis (HC) with those of bladder ischemia/reperfusion (IR). We found that not only IR, where direct endothelial damage is present, but also HC and IC, where microcirculatory inflammatory reactions are secondary after urothelial and interstitial damage, are associated with manifest polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN)–endothelial cell interactions. This finding confirms the common role of PMN-mediated microcirculatory reactions in the pathogenesis of bladder diseases. The overexpression of transient receptor potential vanilloid type 1 (TRPV1) has been demonstrated in IC cases as well as in cases of neurogenic bladder. In addition, TRPV1 agonists have also previously been used during pharmacological management of these diseases. Therefore, our next aim was to examine the microcirculatory effects of local capsaicin treatment (the archetypical TRPV1 agonist). In our study, capsaicin induced rapid increases in PMN leukocyte rolling and adhesion and in adhesion molecule expression in the postcapillary venules of the urinary bladder, which was prevented by neonatal sensory chemodenervation with capsaicin and competitive TRPV1 antagonism. The effect of specific receptor antagonist therapy showed that TRPV1-induced calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) release initiates the PMN–endothelial cell interaction by promoting leukocyte rolling, but adhesion is influenced by both CGRP and substance P. Our final goal is to implement medical research in clinical practice. Depending on the underlying cause, neurogenic bladder can manifest in both overactive and underactive forms. Diagnosis and treatment of both manifestations of neurogenic bladder remain a challenge in urology practice because disease severity cannot easily be assessed and the most common symptoms are non-specific. For this reason, our last aim was to provide an algorithm that aims to facilitate rapid and efficient diagnosis and assessment of disease severity. This may also aid in decision making on the potential pharmacological and invasive therapeutic approaches to protecting the upper urinary tract by maintaining low pressure values in the bladder.


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