Purpose: To investigate the usefulness of vamicamide, (+/-)-(2R*, 4R*)-4-dimethylamino-2-phenyl-2-(2-pyridyl)valeramide, as a novel drug for the treatment of urinary frequency and incontinence.
Materials and methods: Urinary frequency was evaluated in specially devised conscious dog and rat models by investigating the effects of the drug on urinary bladder function of these animals by cystometrography.
Results: In the dog model with transected hypogastric nerves, the bladder volume at micturition (bladder capacity) was less than 50% that of the sham-operated dog, and in the rat model with bilateral lesioning of nuclei basalis, a part of the brain, by ibotenic acid injection, bladder capacity was about 50% that of the sham-operated rat. Other bladder functions in both models were unchanged. In the dog model, orally administered vamicamide at 0.32 and 1.0 mg./kg. significantly increased bladder capacity and did not change residual urine volume or micturition pressure. Oxybutynin 0.10 mg./kg., one of the most popular drugs for the treatment of urinary frequency and incontinence, or atropine 0.10 mg./kg. induced significant increases in bladder capacity similarly to vamicamide at 0.32 mg./kg. In the rat model, oral vamicamide 0.32 mg./kg. also significantly increased bladder capacity and did not change micturition pressure or threshold pressure. Again, oxybutynin 0.10 mg./kg. or atropine 0.32 mg./kg. had almost the same effects as vamicamide 0.32 mg./kg.
Conclusions: These findings suggest that vamicamide should be useful for the treatment of urinary frequency.