The Innervation of the Human Prostate Gland—the Changes Associated with Benign Enlargement

Abstract
Different regions of the prostate gland, namely prostatic capsule, peripheral prostate and central prostate (subdivided into proximal (near the bladder neck), distal (near the verumontanum) and midway between these areas) were obtained from 32 obstructed (stable obstructed, n = 8; unstable obstructed, n = 13; acute retention, n = 11) and five control patients. The innervation of these tissues was studied both histochemically to localise acetylcholinesterase activity and immunohistochemically for dopamine-β-hydroxylase, 5-hydroxytryptamine, vasoactive intestinal polypeptide, neuropeptide Y, leu- and met-enkephalin, calcitonin gene-related peptide, substance P and somatostatin. In control patients the greatest density of nerves was found in the proximal central prostate, followed by the anterior capsule and distal central prostate, with the least density in the peripheral prostate. The greatest density of nerves were acetylcholinesterase positive and immunoreactive to neuropeptide Y followed (in decreasing order) by nerves immunoreactive to: vasoactive intestinal polypeptide and dopamine β-hydroxylase; leu-enkephalin and 5-hydroxytryptamine; calcitonin gene-related peptide; met-enkephalin; substance P; somatostatin. In addition a group of periacinar 5-hydroxytryptamine-immunoreactive cells and ganglia containing acetylcholinesterase, dopamine β-hydroxylase and all of the peptides studied except somatostatin were identified. In the prostate gland from obstructed patients there was a significant reduction in the density of acetylcholinesterase-positive nerves (p β-hydroxylase, 5-hydroxytryptamine and all of the putative neuropeptides in most areas of the prostate, the most notable exceptions being in the peripheral prostate, with an increase in dopamine β-hydroxylase- and leu-enkephalin-immunoreactive nerves in all three groups of obstructed patients and an increase in vasoactive intestinal polypeptide- and calcitonin gene-related peptide-immunoreactive nerves in those presenting in urinary retention. The functional significance of these findings is discussed.