Nilson A. Salas
Baylor College of Medicine
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Featured researches published by Nilson A. Salas.
Neurochemistry International | 2008
Christopher P. Smith; David A Gangitano; Alvaro Munoz; Nilson A. Salas; Timothy B. Boone; K. Roger Aoki; Joseph Francis; George T. Somogyi
The purpose of this paper was to simultaneously examine changes in urothelial ATP and NO release in normal and spinal cord injured animals as well as in spinal cord injured animals treated with botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A). Furthermore we correlated changes in transmitter release with functional changes in bladder contraction frequency, and determined the effects of BoNT-A on bladder efferent nerve function. Normal and spinal cord injured rat bladders were injected on day 0 with either vehicle (saline containing bovine serum albumin) or BoNT-A. On day 2, in vitro neurotransmitter release and bladder strip contractility studies as well as in vivo cystometrographic studies were conducted. Resting ATP release was significantly enhanced following spinal cord injury (i.e. 57% increase, p<0.05) and was unaffected by BoNT-A treatment. SCI increased hypoosmotic evoked urothelial ATP release by 377% (p<0.05). BoNT-A treatment reduced evoked ATP release in SCI bladders by 83% (p<0.05). In contrast, hypoosmotic stimulation induced NO release was significantly inhibited following SCI (i.e. 50%, p<0.05) but recovered in SCI rats treated with BoNT-A (i.e. 195% increase in NO release in SCI-BTX-treated rats compared to SCI controls, p<0.01). Changes in urothelial transmitter release coincided with a significant decrease in non-voiding bladder contraction frequency (i.e. 71%, p<0.05) in SCI-BTX rats compared to SCI rats. While no difference was measured between neurally evoked contractile amplitude between SCI and SCI-BTX animals, atropine (1 microM) inhibited contractile amplitude to a greater extent (i.e. 76%, p<0.05) in the SCI-BTX group compared to the SCI group. We hypothesize that alterations in the ratio of excitatory (i.e. ATP) and inhibitory (i.e. NO) urothelial transmitters promote bladder hyperactivity in rat bladders following SCI that can be reversed, to a large extent, by treatment with BoNT-A.
Neurochemistry International | 2007
Nilson A. Salas; George T. Somogyi; David A Gangitano; Timothy B. Boone; Christopher P. Smith
Neurally intact (NI) rats and chronic spinal cord injured (SCI) rats were studied to determine how activation of mechanosensory or cholinergic receptors in the bladder urothelium evokes ATP release from afferent terminals in the bladder as well as in the spinal cord. Spinal cord transection was performed at the T(9)-T(10) level 2-3 weeks prior to the experiment and a microdialysis fiber was inserted in the L(6)-S(1) lumbosacral spinal cord one day before the experiments. Mechanically evoked (i.e. 10 cm/W bladder pressure) ATP release into the bladder lumen was approximately 6.5-fold higher in SCI compared to NI rats (p<0.05). Intravesical carbachol (CCh) induced a significantly greater release of ATP in the bladder from SCI as compared to NI rats (3424.32+/-1255.57 pmol/ml versus 613.74+/-470.44 pmol/ml, respectively, p<0.05). However, ATP release in NI or SCI rats to intravesical CCh was not affected by the muscarinic antagonist atropine (Atr). Spinal release of ATP to bladder stimulation with 10 cm/W pressure was five-fold higher in SCI compared to NI rats (p<0.05). CCh also induced a significantly greater release of spinal ATP in SCI rats compared to controls (4.3+/-0.9 pmol versus 0.90+/-0.15 pmol, p<0.05). Surprisingly, the percent inhibitory effect of Atr on CCh-induced ATP release was less pronounced in SCI as compared to NI rats (49% versus 89%, respectively). SCI induces a dramatic increase in intravesical pressure and cholinergic receptor evoked bladder and spinal ATP release. Muscarinic receptors do not mediate intravesical CCh-induced ATP release into the bladder lumen in NI or SCI rats. In NI rats sensory muscarinic receptors are the predominant mechanism by which CCh induces ATP release from primary afferents within the lumbosacral spinal cord. Following SCI, however, nicotinic or purinergic receptor mechanisms become active, as evidenced by the fact that Atr was only partially effective in inhibiting CCh-induced spinal ATP release.
BJUI | 2007
Mohit Khera; Timothy B. Boone; Nilson A. Salas; Mary Frances Jett; George T. Somogyi
To determine the effects of the prostacyclin receptor (IP) antagonist RO3244019 on neurogenic detrusor overactivity (NDO) in spinal cord‐injured (SCI) neurogenic bladder of the rat.
The Journal of Urology | 2008
Christopher P. Smith; David A Gangitano; Alvaro Munoz; Nilson A. Salas; Timothy B. Boone; Kei Roger Aoki; Joseph Francis; George T. Somogyi
The purpose of this paper was to simultaneously examine changes in urothelial ATP and NO release in normal and spinal cord injured animals as well as in spinal cord injured animals treated with botulinum toxin type A (BoNT-A). Furthermore we correlated changes in transmitter release with functional changes in bladder contraction frequency, and determined the effects of BoNT-A on bladder efferent nerve function. Normal and spinal cord injured rat bladders were injected on day 0 with either vehicle (saline containing bovine serum albumin) or BoNT-A. On day 2, in vitro neurotransmitter release and bladder strip contractility studies as well as in vivo cystometrographic studies were conducted. Resting ATP release was significantly enhanced following spinal cord injury (i.e. 57% increase, p<0.05) and was unaffected by BoNT-A treatment. SCI increased hypo-osmotic evoked urothelial ATP release by 377% (p<0.05). BoNT-A treatment reduced evoked ATP release in SCI bladders by 83% (p<0.05). In contrast, hypo-osmotic stimulation induced NO release was significantly inhibited following SCI (i.e. 50%, p<0.05) but recovered in SCI rats treated with BoNTA (i.e. 195% increase in NO release in SCI-BTX treated rats compared to SCI controls, p<0.01). Changes in urothelial transmitter release coincided with a significant decrease in non-voiding bladder contraction frequency (i.e. 71%, p<0.05) in SCI-BTX rats compared to SCI rats. While no difference was measured between neurally evoked contractile amplitude between SCI and SCI-BTX animals, atropine (1µM) inhibited contractile amplitude to a greater extent (i.e. 76%, p<0.05) in the SCI-BTX group compared to the SCI group. We hypothesize that alterations in the ratio of excitatory (i.e. ATP) and inhibitory (i.e. NO) urothelial transmitters promote bladder hyperactivity in rat bladders following SCI that can be reversed, to a large extent, by treatment with BoNT-A.
The Journal of Urology | 2005
Vijaya M. Vemulakonda; George T. Somogyi; Susanna Kiss; Nilson A. Salas; Timothy B. Boone; Christopher P. Smith
Urology | 2005
Mohit Khera; George T. Somogyi; Nilson A. Salas; Susanna Kiss; Timothy B. Boone; Christopher P. Smith
Journal of Endourology | 2008
John R. Boon Md; Nilson A. Salas; Desiderio Avila; Timothy B. Boone; Larry I. Lipshultz; Richard E. Link
The Journal of Urology | 2005
Nilson A. Salas; Christopher P. Smith; Susanna Kiss; Timothy B. Boone; George T. Somogyi
The Journal of Urology | 2004
Mohit Khera; George T. Somogyi; Nilson A. Salas; Vijaya M. Vemulakonda; Jeffrey L. Evans; Susanna Kiss; Christopher P. Smith; Timothy B. Boone
F1000Research | 2013
Alvaro Muñoz; Timothy B. Boone; Christopher P. Smith; Nilson A. Salas; George T. Somogyi