Physiology of Micturition
Physiology of Micturition
Physiology of Micturition
Dept. of Physiology
Micturition (definition)
It is the process by which urinary bladder empties itself of urine when it becomes filled. Phases: 1- Filling phase Bladder fills progressively until the tension in its walls rises above a threshold level, this elicits the second step 2- Micturition reflex: that empties the bladder.
Smooth muscle of the bladder (detrusor muscle) is arranged in spiral, longitudinal and circular bundles. The muscle bundles pass on either side of the urethra are called the internal urethral spincter.
Body
Trigone (on the posterior wall) Neck
The walls of ureters contain smooth muscle arranged in spiral, longitudinal and circular bundles.
The ureters pass obliquely through the detrusor muscle and it passes little further underneath the bladder mucosa. This oblique passage tends to keep the ureters closed except during peristaltic waves, preventing reflux of urine from the bladder. In some people, the distance that the ureter courses through the bladder mucosa is less than normal, so that contraction of the bladder during micturition does not always lead to complete occlusion of the ureter. As a result some of the urine in the bladder is propelled backward into the ureter. This is called Vesicoureteral reflux. Ureterorenal reflex The ureters are well supplied with pain nerve fibers. When a ureter is blocked eg. by a ureteral stone, there will be intense reflex constriction which is associated with very severe pain. These pain impulses cause a sympathetic reflex back to the kidney to constrict the renal arterioles, thereby decreasing urinary output from that kidney. This effect is known as Ureterorenal reflex.
L3
Sympathetic chain Hypogastric ganglion Hypogastric nerve
Pelvic nerve
External sphincter
Sympathetic nerve supply and Internal urethral sphincter apparently play no role in micturition. However sympathetics are nerves of filling. Parasympathetic nerve supply Sensory fibers in the pelvic nerve carry impulses from stretch receptors present on the wall of the urinary bladder to the spinal centre of micturition. Stimulation of parasympathetic efferent fibers causes contraction of detrusor muscle leading to emptying of urinary bladder. Somatic nerve supply This maintains the tonic contractions of the skeletal muscle fibers of the external sphincter, so that this sphincter is contracted always. During micturition this nerve is inhibited, causing relaxation of the external sphincter and voiding of urine.
What is micturition?
Spinal cord reflex activity. * facilitated or inhibited by higher centers * voluntary facilitation or inhibition
The relationship between the volume of urine and pressure in the urinary bladder (intravesical pressure) can be studied by inserting a double lumen catheter and emptying the bladder. Then the pressure is recorded by connecting one lumen of the catheter to a suitable recording instrument while introducing water or air through the other lumen. The graphical recording of the pressure changes in the urinary bladder in relation to rise in the volume of urine collected in it is called cystometrogram. Cystometry is the technique used to demonstrate this relationship.
Cystometrogram
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When the urinary bladder is empty, the intravesical pressure is zero. When about 50 mL of fluid is collected, the pressure rises sharply (Ia)to about 10 cm H2O (Ia in the cystometrogram). The pressure in the bladder remains more or less constant with further addition of about 350 mL of urine (Ib) in an adult. This is in accordance with law of Laplace. In the bladder tension increases as the urine is filled. At the sametime, the radius also increases due to relaxation of the detrusor muscle. Because of this, the pressure rise is almost nil. When bladder wall stretches during filling it will initiate a reflex contraction which has lower threshold. That does not trigger micturition reflex. When bladder is filled about 300 400 mL of urine, there will be sharp rise in the intravesical pressure as the micturition reflex is triggered.
When, urine of about 400 mL is collected, the contraction of detrusor muscle becomes intense, increasing the consciousness and the urge for micturition. At this point also voluntary control is possible. Beyond 600 700 mL of urine voluntary control starts failing.
Micturition contractions
lb la
Volume (milliliters)
Spinal centers of micturition which are present in sacral and lumbar segments are regulated by higher centers in the brain stem (Facilitatory area in the pontine region and inhibitory area in the mid brain). The threshold for the voiding reflex is adjusted by the activity of facilitatory and inhibitory centers.
When the micturition is facilitated, perineal muscles and external urethral sphincter are relaxed, the detrusor muscle contracts and urine passes out through the urethra. During micturition, the flow of urine is facilitated by increase in the abdominal pressure due to voluntary contractions of abdominal muscles. After urination, the female urethra empties by gravity. Urine remaining in the urethra of the male is expelled by several contractions of the bulbocavernosus muscle.
Simple reflex control of micturition seen in infants. The ability of voluntary control (inhibition) develops at the age of 2 3 years.
Abnormalities of micturition
1. Atonic bladder
This is due to destruction of sensory nerve fibers from the bladder. When the dorsal sacral roots are interrupted by diseases of the dorsal roots such as tabes dorsalis or when there is crush injury to sacral segments of spinal cord, person looses bladder control (abolition of reflex contractions of the bladder). Bladder muscle looses the tone (hypotonic) and becomes flaccid). Bladder fills to the capacity and overflows few drops at a time through the urethra (overflow incontinence or overflow dribbling).