oleoyl-ethyl-amide and Urinary-Bladder--Overactive

oleoyl-ethyl-amide has been researched along with Urinary-Bladder--Overactive* in 2 studies

Other Studies

2 other study(ies) available for oleoyl-ethyl-amide and Urinary-Bladder--Overactive

ArticleYear
The fatty acid amide hydrolase inhibitor oleoyl ethyl amide counteracts bladder overactivity in female rats.
    Neurourology and urodynamics, 2014, Volume: 33, Issue:8

    To study micturition and bladder overactivity in female rats after chronic treatment with the fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH) inhibitor oleoyl ethyl amide (OEtA).. Sprague-Dawley rats received daily subcutaneous injections of OEtA (0.3 mg/kg), or vehicle for 2 weeks. Cystometries, organ bath studies, Western blot, and immunofluorescence were then used. Expressions of FAAH, cannabinoid 1 and 2 receptors (CB1 and CB2), mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), vesicular acetyl choline-transporter protein (VAChT), and calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) were evaluated.. At baseline, OEtA-treated rats had higher values (P < 0.05) of micturition intervals (MI) and volumes (MV), bladder capacity (BC), threshold pressure, and flow pressure than vehicle controls. Intravesical PGE2 reduced MI, MV, and BC, and increased basal pressure and the area under the curve in all rats. However, these urodynamic parameters were altered less by intravesical PGE2 in OEtA-treated rats (P < 0.05 vs. vehicle controls). Compared to vehicle controls, detrusor from OEtA-treated rats had larger contractions to carbachol at 10-0.1 µM, but no difference in Emax was recorded. FAAH, CB1, CB2, VAChT, or CGRP was similarly expressed in bladders from all rats. In separate experiments, intravesical OEtA increased mucosal expression of phosphorylated MAPK.. Chronic FAAH inhibition altered sensory urodynamic parameters and reduced bladder overactivity. Even if it cannot be excluded that OEtA may act on central nervous sensory pathways to contribute to these effects, the presence of FAAH and CB receptors in the bladder and activation of intracellular signals for CB receptors by intravesical OEtA suggest a local role for FAAH in micturition control.

    Topics: Amidohydrolases; Animals; Female; Oleic Acids; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Urinary Bladder, Overactive

2014
Spinal cord FAAH in normal micturition control and bladder overactivity in awake rats.
    The Journal of urology, 2013, Volume: 189, Issue:6

    We assessed whether spinal inhibition of the cannabinoid degrading enzyme FAAH would have urodynamic effects in normal rats and rats with bladder overactivity induced by partial urethral obstruction or prostaglandin E2. We also determined the expression of FAAH, and the cannabinoid receptors CB1 and CB2 in the sacral spinal cord.. We used 44 rats for functional (cystometry) and Western blot experiments. The FAAH inhibitor oleoyl ethyl amide (3 to 300 nmol) was administered intrathecally (subarachnoidally) or intravenously. The expression of FAAH and CB1/CB2 receptors was determined by Western blot.. Oleoyl ethyl amide given intrathecally affected micturition in normal rats and rats with bladder overactivity but effects were more pronounced in the latter. In normal rats oleoyl ethyl amide only decreased micturition frequency, while it decreased frequency and bladder pressures in rats with bladder overactivity. Intravenous oleoyl ethyl amide (3 to 300 nmol) had no urodynamic effect. FAAH and CB1/CB2 receptors were expressed in the rat sacral spinal cord. The expression of CB1/CB2 receptors but not FAAH was higher in obstructed than in normal rats.. FAAH inhibition in the sacral spinal cord by oleoyl ethyl amide resulted in urodynamic effects in normal rats and rats with bladder overactivity. The spinal endocannabinoid system may be involved in normal micturition control and it appears altered when there is bladder overactivity.

    Topics: Amidohydrolases; Analysis of Variance; Animals; Blotting, Western; Dinoprostone; Disease Models, Animal; Female; Injections, Intravenous; Injections, Spinal; Oleic Acids; Random Allocation; Rats; Rats, Sprague-Dawley; Receptor, Cannabinoid, CB2; Reference Values; Spinal Cord; Urethral Obstruction; Urinary Bladder, Overactive; Urination; Urodynamics

2013