Background: Cerebrovascular disease may impair the autonomic control of peripheral organs including the male urogenital tract. This study investigates the effect of cortico-parietal focal ischaemia on the adrenergic and purinergic transmission in isolated epididymal and prostatic portion of rat vas deferens.
Methods: Focal brain ischaemia was induced in male rats by photochemical activation following rose bengal intravenous injection. Twenty-four hours following brain ischaemia, cumulative and non-cumulative concentration-response curves were obtained for noradrenaline and alpha,beta-methylene ATP in the right and left epididymal and prostatic portions of the vas deferens. Both portions were also stimulated by single-pulse or pulse trains at 2-30 Hz to produce isometric contractions.
Results: In both portions from ischaemic rats the response to exogenous noradrenaline was markedly depressed compared with controls. Acute cortico-parietal ischaemia almost completely abolished the adrenergic phase of the response to single-pulse stimulation in the epididymal portion of the vas deferens. In addition, brain ischaemia deeply depressed phasic and tonic contractions of the frequency-response curve in both portions of bisected vas deferens.
Conclusions: Cortico-parietal ischaemia produces a selective noradrenergic impairment at the level of male sexual secondary organs that may contribute to sexual dysfunction after stroke.