A PET study on brain control of micturition in humans.

@article{Blok1997APS,
  title={A PET study on brain control of micturition in humans.},
  author={Bertil F. M. Blok and Antoon T. M. Willemsen and Gert Holstege},
  journal={Brain : a journal of neurology},
  year={1997},
  volume={120 ( Pt 1)},
  pages={
          111-21
        }
}
Although the brain plays a crucial role in the control of micturition, little is known about the structures involved. Identification of these areas is important, because their dysfunction is though to cause urge incontinence, a major problem in the elderly. In the cat, three areas in the brainstem and diencephalon are specifically implicated in the control of micturition: the dorsomedial pontine tegmentum, the periaqueductal grey, and the preoptic area of the hypothalamus. PET scans were used… 
Brain activation during micturition in women.
TLDR
The results suggest that in women and in men the same specific nuclei exist in the pontine tegmentum responsible for the control of micturition, and indicate that the cortical and pontine mictsurition sites are more active on the right than on the left side.
Cerebral activation during micturition in normal men.
TLDR
It is concluded that the onset and maintenance of micturition in normal men is associated with a vast network of cortical and subcortical regions, confirming observations from clinical and animal studies.
Supraspinal Control of Urine Storage and Micturition in Men—An fMRI Study
TLDR
It is suggested that micturition is controlled by a specific supraspinal network which is essential for the voluntary initiation of mictsurition, and once this network triggers the bulbospinal mitzurition reflex via brainstem centers, mictorition continues automatically without further suprasinal input.
Neural control of micturition in humans: a working model
TLDR
Behavioural treatments of urgency incontinence lead to changes in brain function that support the working model in which a few forebrain circuits advance or delay the triggering of the voiding reflex, and suggest the mechanism of this type of treatment.
Midbrain control of micturition in the rat
The role of the periaqueductal grey (PAG) in the central control of micturition was investigated in urethane-anaesthetised rats, with the aims of furthering understanding of the central control of
The Pontine Micturition Centres
  • D. Griffiths
  • Medicine
    Scandinavian journal of urology and nephrology. Supplementum
  • 2002
TLDR
The M-region in the cat, homologous to Barrington's micturition centre and to a similar area in humans, is a small region both specific and necessary to voiding, the origin of the final common pathway to bladder and urethra, and the locus of co-ordination of the bladder and the striated sphincter.
Pontine control of ejaculation and female orgasm.
TLDR
Activation of a localized region on the left side in the dorsolateral pontine tegmentum, which is termed the pelvic organ-stimulating center, occurs during ejaculation in men and physical orgasm in women.
...
1
2
3
4
5
...

References

SHOWING 1-10 OF 31 REFERENCES
Excitatory and inhibitory bladder responses to stimulation of 'limbic', diencephalic and mesencephalic structures in the cat.
  • R. Gjone
  • Biology, Medicine
    Acta physiologica Scandinavica
  • 1966
TLDR
Exitatory effects of stimulation were identified as parasympathetic and inhibitory effects as sympathetic in nature by means of intravesical pressure recording through a cystostomy.
Relation of periaqueductal gray matter to stomach and bladder motility
TLDR
Investigations were undertaken in an effort to determine whether or not functional, descending, autonomic pathways could be delineated within the periaqueductal gray matter, and the results of 2 investigations are presented.
Localization of a human system for sustained attention by positron emission tomography
POSITRON emission tomographic (PET) studies of human attention have begun to dissect isolable components of this complex higher brain function, including a midline attentional system in a region of
Anatomical and physiological observations on suprapinal control of bladder and urethral sphincter muscles in the cat
TLDR
In 15 cats injections of 3H‐leucine made in the pontine tegmentum resulted in specific projections to the sacral intermediomedial and intermediolateral cell groups, which contains preganglionic parasympathetic neurons that form the motor supply of the detrusor muscle of the bladder.
Noun and verb retrieval by normal subjects. Studies with PET.
TLDR
The left inferolateral temporal cortex and the posterior part of the inferior parietal lobe were only activated by word retrieval, particularly verbs, and it is proposed that these activated regions reflect access to semantic fields.
The anterior cingulate cortex mediates processing selection in the Stroop attentional conflict paradigm.
TLDR
Regional cerebral blood flow, an index of local neuronal activity, was measured using positron emission tomography during the performance of the classic Stroop color/word task in eight healthy right-handed subjects to provide support for the role of the anterior cingulate cortex in attentional processing through the selection and recruitment of processing centers appropriate for task execution.
Central nervous pathways mediating angina pectoris
The pathophysiology of urinary incontinence among institutionalized elderly persons.
TLDR
It is concluded that the pathophysiology of incontinence in this population is complex; that detrusor hyperreflexia with normal contractility ("uninhibited bladder") accounts for the minority of cases, even among patients with dementia; and that the causes ofincontinence are as diverse in severely impaired elderly persons as in those who are unimpaired.
Micturition symptoms in frontal tumours
In a series of 50 consecutive tumours involving the frontal lobes, seven cases (14%) were found who exhibited the syndrome, first described by Andrew and Nathan in 1964, of frequency of micturition,
...
1
2
3
4
...