Intravesical oxybutynin hydrochloride was administered to 17 patients with a neuropathic bladder (myelomeningocele in 15 and spinal cord tumour in two) and urinary incontinence refractory to intermittent catheterisation. Therapy consisted of instillation of a 10 ml solution containing 5 mg oxybutynin hydro chloride twice daily. The cystometric bladder capacity before and after 1 hour of intravesical oxybutynin hydrochloride was 132 ± 45 ml and 193 ± 71 ml (mean ± 1 standard deviation, p < 0.01) in all 17 patients. In 13 patients with low compliant bladders, the mean bladder compliance before and after 1 hour of instillation was 4.2 ± 2.4 ml/cmH20 and 8.5 ± 6.4 ml/cmH20 respectively (p < 0. 01). The period of the intravesical oxybutynin hydrochloride treatment ranged from 2 to 16 months (mean 11. 1 months). The improvement rate of 'moderately improved' and better response was 76.5% in all 17 patients. One patient complained of slight lower abdominal pain, which receded as treatment continued. Since the pH value of the solution appeared to be so low as to irritate the vesical mucosa, the value was adjusted to 5.85. No local or systemic side effects were observed thereafter. These encouraging results suggest that intravesical instillation of oxybutynin hydrochloride is an attractive alternative in patients with a neuropathic bladder, who are either unresponsive to or have intolerable side effects from oral medications.
Male rabbit's external urethral sphincter was examined by histochemical muscle fiber typing (myosin ATP-ase staining), and the analysis with construction of histograms regarding to muscle fiber types were performed. Rabbit's external urethral sphincter was predominantly composed of fast twitch (type 2) fibers (87.3%) as a whole. But the proportion of constituent fiber types varied according to the layers, i.e., the slow twitch (type 1) fibers constituted a relatively high percentage (33.4%) in the inner third layer, while few of the type 1 fibers were found in the outer third layer. The all histograms regarding to fiber type in different layers were normal bell-shaped distribution curves. The mena diameter of type 2 fibers (14.7 microns) was evidently larger than that of type 1 fibers (20.5 microns). All three kinds of muscle fibers equally tended to increase in size toward the outer direction, and in every three layers, the diameter of type 2 was larger than that of type 1 also. The definite differences in the proportion of fiber types and fiber sizes between layers may implicate that the inner and outer layers play different roles, i.e., continuous tonic constriction in the former and sporadic strong constriction of short duration in the latter, under different neural regulations. As far as rabbit's external urethral sphincter is concerned, sporadic strong constriction should be mainly dependent on the muscle fibers of large size composing the outer layer, especially the fast twitch fibers. It is possible that the rabbit is so adapted that it could interrupt urination promptly.
It is suggested that intravesical oxybutynin hydrochloride is an effective option of therapy for intractable urge incontinence in elderly people, however, the immediate posttreatment cystometrogram was not predictive of the response to intravesical therapy on overactive bladder in the elderly.
The study indicated that the right inferior frontal gyrus and the right middle temporal gyrus, especially the right inferior frontal gyrus, played a role in the cerebral control of bladder storage, inhibiting the contraction of detrusor in urine storage.
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