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Structure of the intramural nerves of the rat bladder

  • Published:
Journal of Neurocytology

Abstract

The bladder of adult female rats receives ∼16,000 axons (i.e., is the target of that many ganglion neurons) of which at least half are sensory. In nerves containing between 40 and 1200 axons cross-sectional area is proportional to number of axons; >99% of axons are unmyelinated. A capsule forms a seal around nerves and ends abruptly where nerves, after branching, contain ∼10 axons. A single blood vessel is present in many of the large nerves but never in nerves of <600 axons. The number of glial cells was estimated through the number of their nuclei. There is a glial nucleus profile every 76 axonal profiles. Each glial cell is associated with many axons and collectively covers ∼1,000 μm of axonal length. In all nerves a few axonal profiles contain large clusters of vesicles independent of microtubules. The axons do not branch; they alter their relative position along the nerve; they vary in size along their length; none has a circular profile. All the axons are fully wrapped by glial cells and never contact each other. The volume of axons is larger than that of glial cells (55%–45%), while the surface of glial cell is twice as extensive as that of axons; there are ∼2.27 m2 of axolemma and ∼4.60 m2 of glial cell membrane per gram of nerve. Of the mitochondria of a nerve ∼3/4 are in axons and ∼1/4 in glial cells.

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Gabella, G. Structure of the intramural nerves of the rat bladder. J Neurocytol 28, 615–637 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1007084130642

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