Published online Feb 4, 2016. doi: 10.5492/wjccm.v5.i1.1
Peer-review started: May 20, 2015
First decision: July 6, 2015
Revised: September 15, 2015
Accepted: November 10, 2015
Article in press: November 11, 2015
Published online: February 4, 2016
Processing time: 255 Days and 13.5 Hours
Spinal cord injury (SCI) leads generally to an irreversible loss of sensory functions and voluntary motor control below injury level. Cures that could repair SCI and/or restore voluntary walking have not been yet developed nor commercialized. Beyond the well-known loss of walking capabilities, most SCI patients experience also a plethora of motor problems and health concerns including specific bladder and bowel dysfunctions. Indeed, chronic constipation and urinary retention, two significant life-threatening complications, are typically found in patients suffering of traumatic (e.g., falls or car accidents) or non-traumatic SCI (e.g., multiple sclerosis, spinal tumors). Secondary health concerns associated with these dysfunctions include hemorrhoids, abdominal distention, altered visceral sensitivity, hydronephrosis, kidney failure, urinary tract infections, sepsis and, in some cases, cardiac arrest. Consequently, individuals with chronic SCI are forced to regularly seek emergency and critical care treatments when some of these conditions occur or become intolerable. Increasing evidence supports the existence of a novel experimental approach that may be capable of preventing the occurrence or severity of bladder and bowel problems. Indeed, recent findings in animal models of SCI have revealed that, despite paraplegia or tetraplegia, it remains possible to elicit episodes of micturition and defecation by acting pharmacologically or electrically upon specialized lumbosacral neuronal networks, namely the spinal or sacral micturition center (SMC) and lumbosacral defecation center (LDC). Daily activation of SMC and LDC neurons could potentially become, new classes of minimally invasive treatments (i.e., if orally active) against these dysfunctions and their many life-threatening complications.
Core tip: This editorial is one of the first to describe clearly the existence of an urgent medical need for new pharmacological products aimed at providing non-invasive solutions for those suffering chronically of constipation and urinary retention or detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia. Products combining several already known and safe active ingredients for new or synergistic effects acting upon specific central networks of neurons that normally control these functions are of particular interest.