Nervous Control of Micturition
Micturition (urination) is:
- Sympathetic activity
- Parasympathetic activity — Correct Answer
- Both sympathetic and parasympathetic activity
- Voluntary activity only
Correct Answer: Parasympathetic activity
Micturition (urination) is primarily a parasympathetic activity. The sympathetic nervous system has no significant role in micturition itself.
Neural Control of Micturition
- Parasympathetic nerves (pelvic nerves, S2–S4): Contract the detrusor muscle (bladder wall) + Relax the internal urethral sphincter → Urine is expelled
- Sympathetic nerves (hypogastric nerve, L1–L2): Relax the detrusor muscle + Contract the internal sphincter → Storage phase; sympathetics PREVENT micturition during bladder filling
- Somatic nerve (pudendal nerve): Controls the external urethral sphincter (voluntary control)
Micturition Reflex
Bladder fills → stretch receptors activated → afferent signals to sacral spinal cord → parasympathetic efferent → detrusor contraction + sphincter relaxation → voiding. This reflex is modulated by higher brain centres (pontine micturition centre).
Key Terminology
- Micturition: Process of emptying the urinary bladder (also called urination)
- Polyuria: Increased urine output
- Oliguria: Decreased urine output
- Anuria: No urine output
- Stranguria: Slow, dropwise, painful discharge of urine due to spasm of urethra and bladder
📚 About this Topic — Animal Physiology
This multiple choice question is from Animal Physiology, Animal Refresher. It has 4 options with a detailed explanation of the correct answer. Practice more MCQs from Animal Physiology to strengthen your preparation.