Norden C W, Green G M, Kass E H
J Clin Invest. 1968 Dec;47(12):2689-700. doi: 10.1172/JCI105952.
the mechanical clearance of organisms by voiding, and the antibacterial activity of the bladder wall. This study quantified the relative contribution of each of these mechanisms to the resistance of the bladder to bacterial infection.(32)Phosphorus-labeled E. coli. S. aureus, and P. mirabilis were each injected into the urinary bladders of unanesthetized female guinea pigs. At intervals after voiding, the bladders were removed, washed, homogenized, and assayed for residual radioactivity and viable bacteria. Mechanical clearance was measured by the changes in total radioactive count. Antibacterial activity was quantified by comparing the bacterial to radioactive ratios of the original bacterial inoculum with similar ratios in the bladder homogenates. More than 99.9% of the bladder inoculum was rapidly excreted and about 0.1% (10(4)-10(5)) organisms remained attached to the bladder wall. Of those E. coli attached to the bladder, rapid sequential reduction in viability occurred and reached a level of 85% loss at 30 min after inoculation. 4 hr after challenge, less than 10% of those organisms still attached to the bladder mucosa remained viable. P. mirabilis was handled with equal facility, but S. aureus showed a reduction in viability of only 46% at 1 hr and 67% at 4 hr after inoculation. 6 hr after infection with S. aureus, 6 of 12 guinea pig bladders showed multiplication of the organisms still attached to the bladder wall; only 1 of 12 animals challenged with E. coli had comparable multiplication. The mechanism whereby the bladder wall kills bacteria is unclear, but it did not appear to be related to an antibacterial activity of urine, clumping of organisms on bladder mucosa, phagocytosis by leukocytes, or serum levels of bactericidal antibody. Although it is clear that the bladder exhibits intrinsic antibacterial properties, the role of this defense mechanism in the pathogenesis of urinary tract infection requires further clarification.
通过排尿对细菌的机械清除,以及膀胱壁的抗菌活性。本研究量化了这些机制各自对膀胱抵抗细菌感染的相对贡献。(32)用磷标记的大肠杆菌、金黄色葡萄球菌和奇异变形杆菌分别注入未麻醉的雌性豚鼠膀胱。排尿后每隔一段时间,取出膀胱,冲洗、匀浆,并检测残留放射性和活菌数量。通过总放射性计数的变化来测量机械清除。通过比较原始细菌接种物的细菌与放射性比率与膀胱匀浆中的类似比率来量化抗菌活性。超过99.9%的膀胱接种物迅速排出,约0.1%(10⁴-10⁵)个细菌仍附着在膀胱壁上。附着在膀胱上的大肠杆菌中,其活力迅速连续下降,接种后30分钟下降到损失85%的水平。攻击后4小时,仍附着在膀胱黏膜上的那些细菌中,存活的不到10%。奇异变形杆菌的情况类似,但金黄色葡萄球菌在接种后1小时活力仅下降46%,4小时下降67%。感染金黄色葡萄球菌6小时后,12只豚鼠膀胱中有6只显示仍附着在膀胱壁上的细菌繁殖;用大肠杆菌攻击的12只动物中只有1只出现类似的繁殖情况。膀胱壁杀死细菌的机制尚不清楚,但似乎与尿液的抗菌活性、细菌在膀胱黏膜上的聚集、白细胞的吞噬作用或血清杀菌抗体水平无关。虽然很明显膀胱具有内在的抗菌特性,但这种防御机制在尿路感染发病机制中的作用仍需进一步阐明。