Pessina Federica, Valeri Aurora, Dragoni Stefania, Valoti Massimo, Sgaragli Giampietro
Dipartimento di Scienze Biomediche, Università di Siena, Siena, Italy.
Neurourol Urodyn. 2007;26(3):416-23. doi: 10.1002/nau.20323.
To investigate the effects of anoxia and glucopenia (A-G) on both male and female guinea pig urinary bladder.
In whole bladders superfused with oxygenated Krebs' solution, intrinsic nerves underwent electrical field stimulation (EFS) and smooth muscle stimulated with carbachol, ATP, and high potassium. The effect of 1, 2, or 3 hr A-G on the contractile response and the ensuing recovery in Krebs' solution, was monitored. Glycogen content in male and female urinary bladders was also measured.
Under different stimuli male urinary bladder proved to contract more efficiently than female organ. After 1 hr A-G the EFS response of male urinary bladder was virtually abolished and returned to 60% of control response in the recovery phase; in female bladder the EFS responses fully recovered during the reperfusion phase. Full recovery of the response to carbachol, ATP, and high potassium stimulations was observed in both genders. A-G had to be extended to 2 hr to cause smooth muscle impairment (higher in male than in female) and a neuronal impairment in female urinary bladders. When 2-deoxyglucose (2-DG), an inhibitor of glycolysis, was added during 1 hr A-G, both neuronal and smooth muscle damages were significantly enhanced in male, as well as, though to a lesser extent, in female bladder. A significantly higher glycogen content was observed in female as compared to male bladders, which was inversely related with the duration of exposure to A-G.
The higher resistance of female urinary bladder to A-G/reperfusion, can be partly ascribed to the higher glycogen content.