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Dive into the research topics where Robert E. Leggett is active.

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Featured researches published by Robert E. Leggett.


The Journal of Urology | 2001

PROTECTIVE EFFECT OF VITAMIN E ON THE RESPONSE OF THE RABBIT BLADDER TO PARTIAL OUTLET OBSTRUCTION

Mitesh H. Parekh; Robert Lobel; Laura O’Connor; Robert E. Leggett; Robert M. Levin

PURPOSE There is increasing evidence that ischemia/reperfusion is a major etiological factor in the progression of bladder dysfunction after partial outlet obstruction. If this evidence is correct, treatment with an antioxidant should be beneficial in rabbits subjected to partial outlet obstruction. We designed the current study to determine if diets high in alpha-tocopherol protected the rabbit bladder against dysfunction induced by partial outlet obstruction. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 32 rabbits were separated into 4 groups of 8. Groups 1 and 2 were placed on a diet enriched with 1,000 IU/kg. alpha-tocopherol, and groups 3 and 4 were fed a regular diet containing 44 IU/kg. alpha-tocopherol. After 4 weeks partial outlet obstruction was created in groups 1 and 3, while groups 2 and 4 underwent sham operation. After 4 weeks of obstruction the rabbits were anesthetized and the bladders were rapidly excised. Four longitudinal strips obtained from the bladder body were used for contractility studies. The balance of the bladder body was separated between muscle and mucosa. Each section was frozen and stored at -70C for analysis of malondialdehyde as a measure of peroxidation and for alpha-tocopherol concentrations. RESULTS Feeding rabbits a diet high in alpha-tocopherol resulted in significant protection against the development of contractile dysfunction after partial outlet obstruction. The protective effect of alpha-tocopherol was related to significantly decreased malondialdehyde and significantly increased tissue concentrations of alpha-tocopherol. CONCLUSIONS These data indicate that a major etiology of bladder dysfunction secondary to partial outlet obstruction is related to free radical generation and resultant membrane lipid peroxidation.


BJUI | 2005

Effect of bladder ischaemia/reperfusion on superoxide dismutase activity and contraction.

Erim Erdem; Robert E. Leggett; Brian Dicks; Barry A. Kogan; Robert M. Levin

To correlate the effect of bilateral in‐vivo bladder ischaemia/reperfusion on superoxide dismutase activity (SOD) and then to correlate this with contractile responses to various forms of stimulation.


British Journal of Pharmacology | 1997

The role of cyclic nucleotides in guinea-pig bladder contractility

Penelope A. Longhurst; Janice Briscoe; David J. Rosenberg; Robert E. Leggett

1 The effects of phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibition and forskolin pretreatment on the contractile responses of guinea‐pig urinary bladder strips to electrical field stimulation, carbachol, ATP and KCl were studied. 2 Inhibition of cyclic AMP‐specific PDE4 isozymes by rolipram significantly reduced the contractile response of bladder strips to field stimulation. Rolipram also suppressed the contractile response to low concentrations of carbachol, but potentiated the response to high concentrations. The contractile response to ATP was significantly reduced by rolipram treatment, but that to KCl was unaltered. 3 Inhibition of cyclic GMP‐specific PDE5 isozymes by zaprinast had no effects on the contractile response of bladder strips to field stimulation, ATP or KCl. Zaprinast suppressed the contractile responses to 1 μM carbachol and potentiated the response to high concentrations. 4 Contractile responses to field stimulation and to carbachol after pretreatment with the adenylyl cyclase activator, forskolin, were qualitatively similar to those caused by rolipram treatment. β‐Adrenoceptor blockade with propranolol partially reversed the inhibitory effects of rolipram on the response to field stimulation. 5 Rolipram significantly reduced the contractile response of bladder strips from sensitized guinea‐pigs to ovalbumin challenge, but zaprinast was ineffective. PDE inhibition had similar effects on the responsiveness of control and of sensitized guinea‐pig bladder strips to field stimulation, carbachol, ATP and KCl. 6 The data suggest that the contractile response of guinea‐pig bladder strips can be modified by increases in cyclic AMP levels.


The Journal of Urology | 2000

RABBIT URINARY BLADDER BLOOD FLOW CHANGES DURING THE INITIAL STAGE OF PARTIAL OUTLET OBSTRUCTION

Jeremy I. Lieb; Paul Chichester; Barry A. Kogan; Anurag K. Das; Robert E. Leggett; Annette Schröder; Robert M. Levin

PURPOSE The rabbit urinary bladders early response to partial outlet obstruction includes bladder wall remodeling with marked urothelial and fibroblast hyperplasia (1 day) and smooth muscle hypertrophy (3-5 days) resulting in a 4-5 fold increase in bladder mass within 7 days. In this study, we examined the effect of partial outlet obstruction on bladder blood flow during the initial period of rapid growth (1-7 days). MATERIALS AND METHODS Each New Zealand White rabbit was partially obstructed by tying a 2-0 silk ligature loosely around the vesical outlet. After 0 (unoperated), 4 hours, 1, 3, or 7 days of obstruction, 5 rabbits per group were anesthetized and the carotid and femoral arteries cannulated with polyethylene tubing. Additional rabbits receiving sham surgeries were treated like obstructed animals at 4 hours and 1 day post-obstruction (5/group). Using standard methods, fluorescent microspheres were infused through the right carotid artery. Bladder and right kidney were rapidly removed upon completion of sphere infusion; bladder mucosa and muscle were separated. Sphere densities in detrusor, mucosa, and kidney were measured by Interactive Medical Technologies, Ltd. A section of each detrusor tissue was fixed in formalin and immunostained for smooth muscle alpha-actin. RESULTS Mucosal blood flow (0.20 +/- 0.03 ml./min./gm.) was approximately 4-fold greater than that of detrusor (0.05 +/- 0.01 ml./min./gm.). Sham surgery caused a significant increase in bladder blood flow at 4 hours post-obstruction that returned to control levels by 1 day. Both mucosal and muscle blood flows were slightly higher in rabbit bladders obstructed for 4 hours than in sham-operated rabbits, and substantially greater in those obstructed for 1 day: 0.68 +/- 0.13 ml./min./gm. (mucosa) and 0.26 +/- 0.04 ml./min./gm. (muscle). Blood flows returned to control values by 3 days post-obstruction and remained constant through 7 days. Kidney blood flow was unchanged. Although bladder weight increased 4-fold after 7 days of obstruction, the volume fraction of smooth muscle (transverse section) remained constant at approximately 40%. CONCLUSIONS Blood flow was approximately 4-fold greater in bladder mucosa than in muscle, which may relate to the significantly higher metabolic rate and lower high energy phosphate concentration of mucosa than muscle. Partial outlet obstruction resulted in a significant increase in blood flow at 1 day post-obstruction, which coincides temporally with the early cellular hyperplasia and hypertrophy of obstructed rabbit bladder. This increase in blood flow may be an essential factor for the initial increase in bladder mass. By three days, the blood flow per gram of tissue returned to control levels. The mechanisms relating to the changes in blood flow induced by partial outlet obstruction are currently under investigation.


Urology | 1999

Biochemical evaluation of obstructive bladder dysfunction in men secondary to BPH: a preliminary report☆

Robert M. Levin; Niels Haugaard; Laura J. Mogavero; Robert E. Leggett; Anurag K. Das

Abstract Objectives. In the rabbit, two of the major cellular alterations that mediate bladder dysfunction secondary to partial outlet obstruction are a decreased ability of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) to store and release Ca 2+ , and mitochondrial dysfunction. The objective of the current study was to determine whether SR and mitochondrial dysfunctions are associated with symptomatic benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) in men. Methods. Bladder biopsies were obtained from men with symptomatic BPH and from age-matched men with no urologic dysfunction. Each biopsy was analyzed for the following enzyme activities: malate dehydrogenase and citrate synthase (mitochondrial markers) and the sarcoplasmic reticular enzyme Ca 2+ -dependent adenosine triphosphatase (ATPase). These values were compared with the enzyme activities of control rabbit bladder smooth muscle and bladder smooth muscle obtained from rabbits subjected to 2 weeks of partial outlet obstruction. Results. The enzymatic activities of all three enzymes are significantly lower in human bladder smooth muscle than in rabbit bladder smooth muscle. The maximal activities of all three enzymes are significantly lower in human bladder samples obtained from men with diagnosed obstructive uropathy than in men of equal age with no urologic dysfunction. Conclusions. These studies demonstrate that similar to the response of the rabbit to partial outlet obstruction, obstructive dysfunction secondary to BPH is characterized by mitochondrial and SR dysfunction.


BJUI | 2007

The effects of cyclical oestrogen on bladder and urethral structure and function

Katherine Palmieri; Anita Mannikarottu; Paul Chichester; Barry A. Kogan; Robert E. Leggett; Catherine Whitbeck; Robert M. Levin

To determine the effects of cycling oestrogen in rabbits, as oestrogen is essential for physiological maintenance and integrity of the female urogenital tract.


The Journal of Urology | 2002

Effect of Oral Kohki Tea on Bladder Dysfunction Induced by Severe Partial Outlet Obstruction

Robert M. Levin; Yoshihito Kawashima; Robert E. Leggett; Catherine Whitbeck; Patrick Horan; Kenji Mizutani

PURPOSE Extracts of the leaves of Engelhardtia chrysolepis, a subtropical plant that grows wild in southern China, have been used medicinally in east Asia for hundreds of years. A standard extract named Kohki tea (Maruzen Pharmaceuticals, Onomichi City, Japan) is sold over the counter in Japan as a sweet tea shown to confer many beneficial effects on general health and well-being. The tea contains strong antioxidants, including several dihydroflavonol glycosides. The results of previous studies show that natural products with antioxidant activities provide protective effects on the bladder of rabbits with partial outlet obstruction. We determined in vivo and in vitro whether oral pretreatment of rabbits with Kohki tea protects the bladder from dysfunction induced by partial outlet obstruction. MATERIALS AND METHODS A total of 28 New Zealand White rabbits were separated into 4 groups of 7 each. Rabbits in groups 1 and 2 were treated by gavage with 100 mg./kg. Kohki tea daily in distilled water, while those in groups 3 and 4 were given distilled water. After 4 weeks of daily oral administration each rabbit was sedated, the bladder was catheterized and cystometry was performed at a filling rate of 1 ml. per minute. At the completion of cystometry the rabbits were immediately anesthetized. Moderate outlet obstruction was created in groups 1 and 3, and sham surgery was performed in groups 2 and 4. Treatment was continued for an additional 4 weeks, when each rabbit was sedated and cystometry was repeated. After cystometry the bladder was exposed through a midline incision, excised, weighed and 4 strips of bladder body were cut for contractility studies. The balance of the bladder was separated between smooth muscle and mucosa by blunt dissection, frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -70C for biochemical analyses. RESULTS Partial outlet obstruction stimulated similar increases in the bladder weight of all obstructed rabbits. Partial outlet obstruction resulted in a significant decrease in bladder compliance in all obstructed animals. However, the bladder of obstructed rabbits given Kohki tea were significantly more compliant than those given water. Voiding pressures in the control group and the obstructed group given distilled water were approximately equal, while obstructed rabbits given Kohki tea showed significantly higher maximal voiding pressure. The contractile responses to all forms of stimulation were reduced by obstruction to a significantly greater degree in the rabbits not given tea than in those given tea. Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-adenosine triphosphatase enzyme activity of the bladder was significantly reduced in obstructed rabbits given vehicle but activity was not reduced in obstructed rabbits given Kohki tea. CONCLUSIONS Kohki tea had a significant protective effect on bladder function, contractile responses and bladder biochemistry in rabbits with moderate to severe partial outlet obstruction.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2005

Effect of partial outlet obstruction on nitrotyrosine content and distribution within the rabbit bladder

Robert M. Levin; Canan Aldirmaz Agartan; Robert E. Leggett; Catherine Whitbeck; Paul Chichester; Paul Neuman; Arnold Johnson

Purpose: Evidence indicates that free radicals are etiological factors in obstructive bladder disease. However, it is not clear which species of reactive oxygen or nitrogen species mediate the damage. The current studies were designed to determine if partial outlet obstruction in rabbits results in the generation of nitrotyrosine (NT). Materials and methods: Sixteen rabbits were separated into four groups of four. The rabbits in groups 1 and 2 underwent sham operation while rabbits in groups 3 and 4 underwent partial outlet obstruction. The rabbits in groups 1 and 3 were evaluated after 1 week of obstruction and the rabbits in groups 2 and 4 were evaluated after 2 weeks of obstruction. A separate group of four controls were evaluated simultaneously with the sham and obstructed rabbits. Four rabbits from each group were evaluated after 1 and 2 weeks of obstruction. Four control rabbits were also evaluated. Isolated strips were evaluated for contractile responses and NT content of the mucosa and muscle were quantitated by Western blot analysis. Results: (1) The mucosa contains both 42 and 62 kD proteins exhibiting a strong nitrotyrosine signal; the muscle presents a signal only at 62 kD. (2) The sham operations had no effect on nitrotyrosine distribution or content. (3) The nitrotyrosine of both mucosal proteins and the muscle protein are increased in the 1 week obstructed bladder; whereas, only the 62 kD signal is increased in the two week obstructed bladder mucosa. (4) The contractile response to FS are reduced to a significantly greater degree than the responses to carbachol, KCl, or ATP. Conclusions: These studies clearly demonstrated that partial outlet obstruction in rabbits results in significant increases in nitrotyrosine within the bladder and may contribute to the contractile dysfunctions mediated by partial outlet obstruction. (Mol Cell Biochem 276: 143–148, 2005)


Neurourology and Urodynamics | 1997

Beneficial effects of Tadenan therapy after two weeks of partial obstruction in the rabbit

Robert M. Levin; Anurag K. Das; Niels Haugaard; Yuri Novitsky; Patrick Horan; Robert E. Leggett; Jean-Pierre Riffaud; Penelope A. Longhurst

Tadenan® (Debat Laboratories, France) is a plant extract used in Europe for the treatment of micturition disorders associated with benign prostatic hypertrophy (BPH). Prior studies demonstrated that pretreatment of rabbits with Tadenan significantly reduced the contractile dysfunction observed after 2 weeks of partial outlet obstruction. The specific aim of the present study was to determine the effect of Tadenan therapy following the creation of partial outlet obstruction.


Molecular and Cellular Biochemistry | 2007

Effect of castration on male rabbit lower urinary tract tissue enzymes

Yung-Shun Juan; Bulent Onal; Samuel Broadaway; Julia Cosgrove; Robert E. Leggett; Catherine Whitbeck; Elise De; Rebekah Sokol; Robert M. Levin

AbstractObjectives The influence of testosterone on the prostate and corpus cavernosum have been studied extensively. However, the influence of testosterone on the lower urinary tract (bladder and urethra) have not been investigated to any great extent. The aim of this study was to determine whether androgen deprivation alters lower urinary tract metabolism. Methods A total of 16 rabbits were divided into four groups of four rabbits each. Each rabbit in groups 1–3 underwent surgical bilateral castration for duration of 1, 2 , and 4 weeks, and group 4 underwent sham operations. Sections of bladder body and base wall and mucosa, urethra and corpora were isolated, frozen, and stored under liquid nitrogen. The activities of citrate synthase-thapsigargin sensitive Ca2+ ATPase (Sarco/Endoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+ ATPase [SERCA]), and choline acetyl-transferase were examined as markers for mitochondrial function, sarcoplasmic reticular calcium storage and release, and cholinergic nerve function, respectively. Results The activity of SR function indicator, Ca2+ ATPase was significantly higher in the control corpora than in the control bladder or urethra. Castration resulted in decreased activity in the mitochondria specific enzyme, citrate synthase, the activity of which was greatest in the urethra and lowest in the corpora. Cholinergic nerve density indicator, choline acetyl-transferase activity was greatest in the bladder body and lowest in the urethra. Conclusions Our data indicate that (1) significant differences exist in the activities of all three enzymes in the various organs associated with the lower urinary tract; and (2) that castration results in significant alterations in the activities of all three enzymes in the bladder body, base, urethra, and corpora.

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Robert M. Levin

Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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Catherine Schuler

Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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Catherine Whitbeck

Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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Yung-Shun Juan

Kaohsiung Medical University

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Paul Chichester

Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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Anurag K. Das

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center

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Connor M. Callaghan

Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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Florian Radu

Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences

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