Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6040537 | NeuroImage | 2007 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Conclusion: Among normal “controls”, increasing age leads to decreased responses in brain regions involved in bladder control, including right insula, consistent with its role in mapping normal bladder sensations. Strong ACG activation occurs in urge-incontinent “cases” and may be a sign of urgency, indicating recruitment of alternative pathways when loss of bladder control is feared. Easier ACG provocation in older “cases” reflects lack of physiological reserve or different etiology. ACG responses seem associated with PMC inhibition: reduced ACG activity accompanies failure of inhibition (DO).
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Authors
Derek Griffiths, Stasa D. Tadic, Werner Schaefer, Neil M. Resnick,