Nerve sprouting and neurogenic inflammation characterize the neurogenic detrusor overactive bladder of patients no longer responsive to drug therapies.
Chiara TrainiGiulio Del PopoloMaria-Simonetta Faussone-PellegriniDaniele GuastiStefano CatarinicchiaMaria Giuliana VannucchiPublished in: Journal of cellular and molecular medicine (2019)
Urothelium and Lamina Propria (LP) are considered an integrate sensory system which is able to control the detrusor activity. Complete supra-sacral spinal cord lesions cause Neurogenic Detrusor Overactivity (NDO) whose main symptoms are urgency and incontinence. NDO therapy at first consists in anti-muscarinic drugs; secondly, in intra-vesical injection of botulinum toxin. However, with time, all the patients become insensitive to the drugs and decide for cystoplastic surgery. With the aim to get deeper in both NDO and drug's efficacy lack pathogenesis, we investigated the innervation, muscular and connective changes in NDO bladders after surgery by using morphological and quantitative methodologies. Bladder innervation showed a significant global loss associated with an increase in the nerve endings located in the upper LP where a neurogenic inflammation was also present. Smooth muscle cells (SMC) anomalies and fibrosis were found in the detrusor. The increased innervation in the ULP is suggestive for a sprouting and could condition NDO evolution and drug efficacy length. Denervation might cause the SMC anomalies responsible for the detrusor altered contractile activity and intra-cellular traffic and favour the appearance of fibrosis. Inflammation might accelerate these damages. From the clinical point of view, an early anti-inflammatory treatment could positively influence the disease fate.
Keyphrases
- botulinum toxin
- spinal cord injury
- end stage renal disease
- spinal cord
- oxidative stress
- ejection fraction
- chronic kidney disease
- newly diagnosed
- prognostic factors
- minimally invasive
- coronary artery disease
- stem cells
- anti inflammatory
- skeletal muscle
- air pollution
- physical activity
- mass spectrometry
- patient reported outcomes
- depressive symptoms
- atomic force microscopy
- sleep quality
- resistance training
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- adverse drug