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Contractile and Structural Properties of Detrusor from Children with Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction

Authors :
Reena Davda
Navroop Johal
Dan Wood
Christopher H. Fry
Atique U. Ahmed
Kevin Cao
Boyu Xie
Anthony Kanai
Michael Millar
Rita I. Jabr
Source :
Biology, Volume 10, Issue 9, Biology, Vol 10, Iss 863, p 863 (2021), Johal, N, Cao, K, Millar, M, Davda, R, Ahmed, A, Kanai, A J, Wood, D N, Jabr, R & Fry, C H 2021, ' Contractile and Structural Properties of Detrusor from Children with Neurogenic Lower Urinary Tract Dysfunction ', Biology, vol. 10, no. 9, 863 . https://doi.org/10.3390/biology10090863
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2021.

Abstract

Simple Summary Disorders of bladder function can result from congenital spinal cord developmental defects and can remain in a significant number of patients despite surgical improvements to repair the primary defect. We studied the ability of bladder wall muscle from such patients to contract, a function essential to void collected urine and avoid urinary tract infections and potential damage to the kidneys. Tissue was taken when patients were several years old, at the time of surgical operations to improve bladder function. This tissue would otherwise have been discarded and was collected with the full ethical approval and consent of parents or guardians. We found that the ability of the bladder wall samples to contract was impaired and was generally stiffer; both of which would make it more difficult for the bladder to void urine. These functional changes were associated with a replacement of muscle with connective tissue (fibrosis). The experiments provide a pathway to devise strategies that might improve bladder function in these patients through reversal of the intrinsic tissue pathways that increase fibrosis. Abstract Neurogenic lower urinary tract (NLUT) dysfunction in paediatric patients can arise after congenital or acquired conditions that affect bladder innervation. With some patients, urinary tract dysfunction remains and is more difficult to treat without understanding the pathophysiology. We measured in vitro detrusor smooth muscle function of samples from such bladders and any association with altered Wnt-signalling pathways that contribute to both foetal development and connective tissue deposition. A comparator group was tissue from children with normally functioning bladders. Nerve-mediated and agonist-induced contractile responses and passive stiffness were measured. Histology measured smooth muscle and connective tissue proportions, and multiplex immunohistochemistry recorded expression of protein targets associated with Wnt-signalling pathways. Detrusor from the NLUT group had reduced contractility and greater stiffness, associated with increased connective tissue content. Immunohistochemistry showed no major changes to Wnt-signalling components except down-regulation of c-Myc, a multifunctional regulator of gene transcription. NLUT is a diverse term for several diagnoses that disrupt bladder innervation. While we cannot speculate about the reasons for these pathophysiological changes, their recognition should guide research to understand their ultimate causes and develop strategies to attenuate and even reverse them. The role of changes to the Wnt-signalling pathways was minor.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20797737
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4abc4a3056cb8b20e90224e4308b0d14
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/biology10090863