Sensory substance P-innervation of the urinary bladder: Possible site of action of capsaicin in causing urine retention in rats

1983 
Abstract In rats treated neonatally with capsaicin there is, in later life, a tendency towards urine retention. Since capsaicin is known to cause irreversible loss of certain primary sensory neurons, notably those containing substance P, we have studied the sensory innervation of the bladder in capsaicin-treated and control rats using retrograde tracing methods and immunohistochemistry; in addition, the motor function of the bladder was assessed in in vitro experiments, using electrical field stimulation. Five days after injection of the fluorescent tracer True Blue into the wall of the bladder, numerous labelled cells were identified in dorsal root ganglia T13, L1, L2, L6, and S1 and smaller numbers of cells were found in T12 and L3. In capsaicin-treated rats the numbers of labelled cells were reduced by over 50% in L1, L6 and S1. In control rats, 10–16% of True Blue labelled cells also contained substance P as demonstrated by indirect immunofluorescence, but in capsaicin-treated rats substance P cells were virtually absent. In in vitro studies, contractions of the detrusor muscle to electrical field stimulation, both before and after atropine, were similar in control and capsaicin-treated rats. We suggest that capsaicin causes urine retention in rats due to an impairment of sensory transmission from the bladder (that could involve substance P) and a consequent failure in the normal micturition reflexes.
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