A Study Of Micturition Inducing Sites In The Periaqueductal Gray Of The Mesencephalon
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Journal of Urology
- Vol. 168 (4 Part 1) , 1626-1631
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0022-5347(05)64532-6
Abstract
The mesencephalon, especially the periaqueductal gray, is believed to integrate specific movement patterns of the somatic and autonomic nervous system, including those of vocalization, defensive behaviors and others. Fiber communications exist between the periaqueductal gray and the pontine micturition center, and many nerve fibers ascending from the sacral spinal cord project to the periaqueductal gray. We examined whether the mesencephalon is involved in micturition function using microstimulation and a neurotracer. We decerebrated 28 adult cats under general anesthesia. An electrode that can be used for microinjection was positioned in stereotaxic fashion in the mesencephalon and pons. Subsequently electrical stimulation and chemical stimulation with DL-homocysteine acid were applied to search for micturition inducing sites. Blood pressure and respiration were monitored simultaneously. We also performed electrical microstimulation of pontine micturition center. The neurotracer 5% Fluoro-Gold (Denver, Colorado) was injected into these sites to identify neural pathways between the mesencephalon and pons. The brainstem was removed after 10 hours and the mesencephalon was examined by fluorescence microscopy. Bladder contraction was provoked by electrical and chemical stimulation applied mainly at the ventrolateral side of the periaqueductal gray. Blood pressure increased simultaneously with bladder contraction after periaqueductal gray stimulation. Neurotracer injected into the pontine micturition center was found mainly on the ventrolateral side of the periaqueductal gray, in agreement with the sites where micturition was provoked by microstimulation. Nerve cells on the ventrolateral side of the periaqueductal gray have neural communications with the pontine micturition center bilaterally and they regulate micturition.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Micturition evoked by glutamate microinjection in the ventrolateral periaqueductal gray is mediated through Barrington’s nucleus in the ratNeuroscience, 2000
- The pontine micturition center in rat receives direct lumbosacral input. An ultrastructural studyNeuroscience Letters, 2000
- Direct projections from the periaqueductal gray to pontine micturition center neurons projecting to the lumbosacral cord segments: an electron microscopic study in the ratNeuroscience Letters, 1998
- A PET study on brain control of micturition in humansBrain, 1997
- Ultrastructural evidence for a paucity of projections from the lumbosacral cord to the pontine micturition center or M‐region in the cat: A new concept for the organization of the micturition reflex with the periaqueductal gray as central relayJournal of Comparative Neurology, 1995
- Direct projections from the periaqueductal gray to the pontine micturition center (M-region). An anterograde and retrograde tracing study in the catNeuroscience Letters, 1994
- Effects of microinjection of a GABA antagonist into the periaqueductal gray upon electrically-induced vocalization in decerebrate catsNeuroscience Research, 1993
- Viscerotopic control of regional vascular beds by discrete groups of neurons within the midbrain periaqueductal grayBrain Research, 1989
- A method for evoking physiological responses by stimulation of cell bodies, but not axons of passage, within localized regions of the central nervous systemJournal of Neuroscience Methods, 1982
- THE EFFECT OF LESIONS OF THE HIND‐ AND MID‐BRAIN ON MICTURITION IN THE CATQuarterly Journal of Experimental Physiology, 1925