Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5626009 Autonomic Neuroscience 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Improvements of imaging techniques make it possible to enhance insight into LUTd.•Imaging of the LUT has the potential to replace invasive urodynamics.•Imaging of LUT brain control promises to reveal new insights into LUTd.

The ability to store urine in the bladder and to void at an appropriate time depends on several complex mechanisms in the lower urinary tract (LUT) and its neural control. Normal LUT function requires coordination of the urinary bladder, urethra, pelvic floor, efferent and afferent neurons and specific spinal cord and brain areas. These structures can be visualised using different imaging modalities, such as ultrasound, X-ray and magnetic resonance imaging. The supraspinal neural control of the LUT can be studied using functional brain imaging. During the last two decades, the many technological improvements of these imaging techniques have increased our knowledge of voiding dysfunction.Here, we review the different imaging modalities of the LUT and its neural control and discuss their importance for diagnosing and understanding voiding dysfunction.

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