Azari Fatemeh, Robertson Anne M, Tobe Yasutaka, Watton Paul N, Birder Lori A, Yoshimura Naoki, Matsuoka Kanako, Hardin Christopher, Watkins Simon
Department of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Pittsburgh, PA, U.S.A.
Department of Bioengineering, University of Pittsburgh, PA, U.S.A.
ArXiv. 2025 Jan 17:arXiv:2501.10312v1.
The high compliance of the urinary bladder during filling is essential for its proper function, enabling it to accommodate significant volumetric increases with minimal rise in transmural pressure. This study aimed to elucidate the physical mechanisms underlying this phenomenon by analyzing the ex vivo filling process in rat from a fully voided state to complete distension, without preconditioning, using three complementary imaging modalities. High-resolution micro-CT at 10.8 m resolution was used to generate detailed 3D reconstructions of the bladder lumen, revealing a 62 fold increase in bladder volume during filling. Pressure-volume studies of whole bladder delineated three mechanical filling regimes: an initial high-compliance phase, a transitional phase, and a final high-pressure phase. While prior studies conjectured small mucosal rugae (∼450 m) are responsible for the high compliance phase, multiphoton microscopy (MPM) of the dome of the voided bladder revealed large folds an order of magnitude larger than these rugae. Bladder imaging during the inflation process demonstrated flattening of these large scale folds is responsible for volume increases in the initial high compliance phase. The 3D reconstructions of the bladder lumen in the filled and voided state revealed a high voiding efficiency of 97.13% ± 2.42%. The MPM imaging results suggest the large scale folds in the dome enable this high voiding fraction by driving urine toward the bladder outlet. These insights are vital for computational models of bladder biomechanics and understanding changes to bladder function due to pathological conditions such as bladder outlet obstruction and age-related dysfunction.
膀胱在充盈过程中的高顺应性对其正常功能至关重要,使其能够在跨壁压力升高最小的情况下容纳显著的容积增加。本研究旨在通过使用三种互补成像方式,分析大鼠从完全排空状态到完全扩张的离体充盈过程(无预处理),阐明这一现象背后的物理机制。使用分辨率为10.8微米的高分辨率微型计算机断层扫描(micro-CT)生成膀胱腔的详细三维重建图像,显示充盈过程中膀胱容积增加了62倍。对整个膀胱的压力-容积研究确定了三种机械充盈状态:初始高顺应性阶段、过渡阶段和最终高压阶段。虽然先前的研究推测小的黏膜皱襞(约450微米)是高顺应性阶段的原因,但对排空膀胱顶部的多光子显微镜(MPM)观察显示,存在比这些皱襞大一个数量级的大褶皱。充气过程中的膀胱成像表明,这些大规模褶皱的扁平化是初始高顺应性阶段容积增加的原因。充盈和排空状态下膀胱腔的三维重建显示排尿效率高达97.13%±2.42%。MPM成像结果表明,顶部的大规模褶皱通过将尿液导向膀胱出口实现了高排尿率。这些见解对于膀胱生物力学计算模型以及理解诸如膀胱出口梗阻和年龄相关功能障碍等病理状况导致的膀胱功能变化至关重要。