Urinary Bladder

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Contents

Urinary bladder
Urinary bladder at woman
Urinary bladder at man

edit edit Structure

The urinary bladder is a hollow viscus, with strong muscular walls (the detrusor muscle and internal urethral sphincter; involuntary innervated), distinguished for its distensibility. One of the main reasons for its ability to change in volume and size, is the pseudo-stratified transitional epithelial lining in its internal surface and of course the elasticity of the muscular walls. It is covered by the visceral fascia. The internal urethral sphincter is also responsible for preventing reflux of semen (retrograde ejaculation) into the bladder, since it closes the internal urethral orifice during the ejaculation. The uvula of bladder is slight elevation of the trigone, just above the neck. In older men where the posterior prostatic lobe is hypertrophic, the uvula is more prominent.

edit edit Divisions

  1. Apex.
  2. Body – it proceeds upwards towards the vertex, the apex of the bladder.
  3. Fundus – it lies posteriorly and is the anterior border of the rectovesical pouch in males and vesicouterine pouch in females.
  4. Neck.

edit edit Surfaces

  1. Superior
  2. Inferolateral (left)
  3. Inferolateral (right)
  4. Posterior

edit edit Umbilical ligaments

edit edit Ureteric orifices

There are 2 ureteric orifices. They lie at the angles of the trigone of the bladder and they form the interureteric crest. At the inferior angle of the trigone, lies the internal urethral orifice. The openings of the ureteric orifices are encircled by loops of the detrusor musculature, that tighten during bladder contraction, thus preventing reflux of urine back to the ureters.

edit edit Position

The urinary bladder is located in the lesser pelvis (after puberty), lying partially superior and partially posterior to the pubic bones. It is separated from the pubic symphysis by the retropubic space and lies mostly inferior to the peritoneum. It is relatively free in the extraperitoneal subcutaneous fatty tissue. When filled, it ascends to the greater pelvis in the extraperitoneal fatty tissued of the anterior abdominal wall. Laterally is held by the lateral vesical ligaments from the neck and the tendinous arch of the pelvic fascia. Anteriorly is held by the puboprostatic ligament (males) and the pubovesical ligament (females).

edit edit Vasculature & Innervation

edit edit Arterial supply

All these arteries are branches of the internal iliac artery.

edit edit Venous drainage

In males: Vesical venous plexus, is continuous with the prostatic venous plexus, receiving blood from the deep dorsal vein of the penis and both plexuses drain into the inferior vesical veins and then into the internal iliac veins. Possible drainage of the plexuses can be also in the internal vertebral venous plexuses through the sacral veins.

In females: Vesical venous plexus that envelopes the pelvic part and neck of the bladder, receives blood from the deep dorsal vein of clitoris and communicates with the (utero)vaginal venous plexus, which in turns drains into the internal iliac vein.

edit edit Lymphatic drainage

It is carried out by vessels that pass from the superolateral aspects of the bladder draining into the external iliac lymph nodes and by vessels passing from the neck and fundus draining into the internal iliac lymph nodes and some into the sacral or common iliac lymph nodes.

edit edit Innervation

edit edit Topographic relation

edit edit Male

edit edit Female


edit edit Links

edit edit Related articles

edit edit Bibliography

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