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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Novel rat model of stress urinary incontinence with a retroflexed bladder.

Journal:
International urogynecology journal
Year:
2010
Authors:
Kawamorita, Naoki et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Urology · Japan
Species:
rodent

Abstract

INTRODUCTION AND HYPOTHESIS: We created a rat model with a retroflexed bladder that mimicked the loss of the posterior urethrovesical angle and compared the results with sham-surgery rats for the establishment of rat models of stress urinary incontinence. METHODS: The retroflexed bladder was created by stitching the bladder posteriorly to the psoas muscle. Sneeze-induced urethral pressure response and urethral baseline pressure were measured using a microtip-transducer catheter and leak point pressures induced by sneezing, the Crede maneuver, and the vertical tilt table method were measured via a supra-pubic cystostomy. RESULTS: In rats with a retroflexed bladder, both urethral pressure response and sneeze-induced leak point pressure were significantly decreased. CONCLUSION: A retroflexed bladder may cause stress urinary incontinence by attenuating the sneeze-induced active urethral closure mechanism. Urethral pressure response restored by resumption of the posterior urethrovesical angle would explain why no sling tension is needed to treat the stress urinary incontinence.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/20062975/