Micturition Flashcards
Describe the sympathetic innervation of the bladder?
- sympathetic efferents travel via the hypogastric nerve
- active during filling + storage phase of micturition
- maintains a tonic contraction of the internal urethral sphincter
- tonically inhibit the contraction of the detrusor muscle
What receptors mediate inhibitory and excitatory actions on the detrusor muscle?
Inhibitory = beta receptors Excitatory = alpha receptors
Which receptors act to keep the urethral sphincters closed?
alpha receptors
What changes occur when the bladder wall starts to fill?
- walls of the bladder become stretched
- receptors in the walls detect the stretch and activate afferents in the pelvic nerves
What happens when the afferents in the pelvic nerves become activated?
- afferents synapse on cells of the spinothalamic tract
- relays signal to the genital area of the somatosensory cortex
- person has a sense of bladder fullness
How can a person inhibit micturition if the conditions are not appropriate?
- tighten the external urethral sphincter (skeletal muscle - voluntary control)
Which nerve do the LMNs controlling the muscles of the external urethral sphincter run in?
Pudendal (S2-S4)
What nucleus is the micturition centre found? Where is this nucleus located?
Barrington’s nucleus
located in the pons
Describe the micturition reflex.
- micturition centre activates descending fibres in the reticulopsinal tract
- this inhibits the sympathetic and somatic outputs controlling the internal and external urethral sphincters
- this activates the parasympathetic efferents
- detrusor muscle is stimulated, causing the bladder to contract and urine to flow out of the urethra
- once contraction of the detrusor starts, afferents in the muscle increase its activity by positive feedback - contraction continues until the bladder is empty
Which receptors mediate the micturition reflex? Are the sympathetic or parasympathetic?
Muscarinic M3 receptors
Parasympathetic
What are pathological storage/irritative symptoms of the lower urinary tract?
- frequency
- nocturia
- urgency
- urge incontinence
What are pathological voiding/obstructive symptoms of the lower urinary tract?
- hesitancy
- straining
- poor flow
- intermittent
- incomplete emptying
Also: terminal dribbling, dysuria, haematuria
What is overactive bladder syndrome (OAB)?
- Urgency
- with or without incontinence
- frequency
- nocturia
What can be used to treat/manage OAB?
antimuscarinics
prevent parasympathetic actions on the bladder
What can be used to treat/manage urge incontinence?
- anticholinergics (oxybutynin, tolterodine)
- blocks ACh in parasympathetic nerves - beta-3 adrenergic (mirabegron)
- beta-3 adrenoreceptors unregulated in OAB
- HTN may be an issue - Botulinum Toxin A (Botox)
- fuses synaptic vesicles with the motor end plate
- hyper continence