• 1 January 1979
    • journal article
    • research article
    • Vol. 17  (1) , 55-59
Abstract
The state of the urethral musculature was studied using the urethral pressure profile and electromyographic [EMG] recording in periurethral striated muscle. In dogs under chloralose anesthesia a micturition reflex could be elicited by bladder distension and somatic reflexes could be elicited by various stimuli. Both the urethral profile and EMG activity could be recorded immediately after surgical transection of the spinal cord between T[thoracic]2 and T8, but the bladder remained areflexic for > 12 h. Pharmacologic analysis of the urethral pressure profile revealed a substantial contribution from both sympathetic and somatic components. The periurethral striated musculature usually responded to bladder filling in a similar manner both before and after transection, although there was no bladder contraction in the latter circumstance. The urethra does not experience the same depression of reflex activity as does the bladder in the acute stage after spinal cord transection.