Simini Boards Cast

Chapter 117 - Part E: Too Tight or Too Loose: Continence, Functional Failure, and Neurologic Control

Simini Podcasts Season 1 Episode 223

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0:00 | 19:51

In this BoardsCast episode, we finish Tobias Chapter 117 Urethra with the only framework you actually need for lower urinary function:

Too tight, nothing comes out. Too loose, nothing stays in.

That’s the whole lower urinary tract in one sentence — but the mechanism underneath is some of the most synchronized neurology in the body. The urethra isn’t a passive pipe. It’s an active resistance regulator that has to do two opposite jobs on command:

  • Storage: bladder relaxes, sphincters contract → resistance stays high 
  • Voiding: bladder contracts, sphincters relax → resistance drops low 

We break down the “hardware” differences that explain why some patients leak and others block (female dog urethra: collagen-heavy passive seal; male cat: extreme distal narrowing), and then we map the “software” that controls it all:

  • Hypogastric (sympathetic): storage mode 
  • Pelvic (parasympathetic): voiding mode 
  • Pudendal (somatic): voluntary override via striated urethralis 

Finally, we hit the board-grade failure patterns:

  • UMN lesions → tight outlet → retention (hard, turgid bladder; hard to express) 
  • LMN lesions → weak outlet → overflow incontinence (flaccid bladder; constant dribbling) 
  • Dyssynergia: bladder contracts while sphincter stays closed = “gas pedal + emergency brake” functional obstruction 

Key takeaway: Continence is controlled resistance — and dysfunction is either too tight, too loose, or mistimed.

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