Detrusor Contractility to Parasympathetic Mediators is Differentially Altered in the Compensated and Decompensated States of Diabetic Bladder Dysfunction
Overview
Physiology
Affiliations
Diabetic bladder dysfunction (DBD) affects up to 50% of all patients with diabetes, characterized by symptoms of both overactive and underactive bladder. Although most diabetic bladder dysfunction studies have been performed using models with type 1 diabetes, few have been performed in models of type 2 diabetes, which accounts for ~90% of all diabetic cases. In a type 2 rat model using a high-fat diet (HFD) and two low doses of streptozotocin (STZ), we examined voiding measurements and functional experiments in urothelium-denuded bladder strips to establish a timeline of disease progression. We hypothesized that overactive bladder symptoms (compensated state) would develop and progress into symptoms characterized by underactive bladder (decompensated state). Our results indicated that this model developed the compensated state at 1 wk after STZ and the decompensated state at 4 mo after STZ administration. Diabetic bladders were hypertrophied compared with control bladders. Increased volume per void and detrusor muscle contractility to exogenous addition of carbachol and ATP confirmed the development of the compensated state. This enhanced contractility to carbachol was not due to increased levels of M receptor expression. Decompensation was characterized by increased volume per void, number of voids, and contractility to ATP but not carbachol. Thus, progression from the compensated to decompensated state may involve decreased contractility to muscarinic stimulation. These data suggest that the compensated state of DBD progresses temporally into the decompensated state in the male HFD/STZ model of diabetes; therefore, this male HFD/STZ model can be used to study the progression of DBD.
Time-dependent bladder activity changes in streptozotocin-induced female diabetic rats.
Izumi K, Kamijo T, Oshiro T, Kimura R, Ashikari A, Kurobe M Physiol Rep. 2025; 13(4):e70220.
PMID: 39980181 PMC: 11842456. DOI: 10.14814/phy2.70220.
Lee C, Kuo H Tzu Chi Med J. 2023; 35(4):312-316.
PMID: 38035054 PMC: 10683516. DOI: 10.4103/tcmj.tcmj_123_23.
Underactive Bladder and Detrusor Underactivity: New Advances and Prospectives.
Wang J, Ren L, Liu X, Liu J, Ling Q Int J Mol Sci. 2023; 24(21).
PMID: 37958499 PMC: 10648240. DOI: 10.3390/ijms242115517.
Han X, Chen Y, Ha L, Yang J, Wang F, Chen H Front Physiol. 2023; 13:1008269.
PMID: 36699677 PMC: 9868671. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2022.1008269.
Hughes Jr F, Odom M, Cervantes A, Purves J Front Physiol. 2022; 13:920487.
PMID: 36505062 PMC: 9733912. DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2022.920487.