Pelvic Viscera I Flashcards

1
Q

Where is the retropubic space in males?

Rectovesicular pouch/fossa?

Retrorectal space?

A

Between the pubis and bladder

Between bladder and rectum

Between rectum and sacrum

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2
Q

The male parietal peritoneum does not reach the pelvic floor. Where is the lowest point of male parietal peritoneum?

What collects there?

A

2cm above the seminal vesicles

Abdominal fluid collects there; abscess likely to form

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3
Q

Where is the endopelvic fascia?

What do the thickened areas of the fascia form?

A

Beneath the peritoneum and covering viscera, pelvic wall and floor; continuous with endoabdominal fascia

Puboprostatic L (male; supports the bladder and prostate) and pubovesical and pubocervical (female)

Lateral ligament of bladder and rectum

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4
Q

What is the cardinal ligament (transverse cervical L)?

What is the paracolpium?

A

Ligament supporting the cervix

Thickened fascia from lateral vagina to tendinous arch; supports the vagina

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5
Q

Where is the ureter in a male?

Bladder?

Seminal vesicles?

Bulbourethral gland?

Prostate?

A

Ureter travels under the vas deferens

Bladder is superior to prostate

Seminal vesicles lie on the posterior surface of the bladder

Bulbourethral gland located within UG membrane

Prostate is below bladder but superior to UG membrane

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6
Q

What and where are the ureters?

Where do the ureters run in males vs females?

A

Connect the kidney to the urinary bladder; retroperitoneal

Pass over the pelvic brim and enter the lesser pelvis

Pass obliquely through urinary bladder wall in an inferomedial direction

Males: run inferior to vas deferens

Females: run inferior to uterine artery

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7
Q

What is the artery and nerve supply to the ureters?

A

Multiple artery supply: renal, gonadal, aortic, internal iliac branches

Nerves: preaortic plexus, hypogastric plexus (sympathetics), pelvic splanchnics N (parasympathetics)

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8
Q

Where is the bladder and what ligaments support it?

What does the superior surface of the bladder look like?

When does the bladder rise above the pelvic brim?

A

Apex points toward the pubic symphysis; fundus is opposite; body lies between; neck lies at bottom

Supported by median umbilical L (urachus) which continues to umbilicus

Supported by lateral L (part of endopelvic fascia)

Superior surface is triangular and bounded by a line connecting the ureters

Bladder only rises above pelvic brim when it is full

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9
Q

What are the two male urethral sphincters?

A

Internal urethral sphincter: circular fibers continuous with detrusor M (smooth m)

External urethral sphincter: skeletal m; located primarily at level of membranous urethra and extends superiorly around prostatic urethra

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10
Q

What lines the interior bladder?

What senses when the area begins to fill with urine?

A

Detrusor M (smooth m) lines the bladder walls and is continuous with internal urethral sphincter and ureteric sphincters

Sensory stretch receptors in bladder wall and posterior urethra sense when the area begins to fill with urine

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11
Q

What innervates the male urethral sphincters?

A

Internal urethral sphincter: smooth m (inferior hypogastric plexus); involuntary

External urethral sphincter: skeletal m (deep perineal branch of pudendal N); voluntary

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12
Q

Posterior ridge on the urethra as it passes through the prostate?

Enlarged area on the crest that opens into two ejaculatory ducts?

Remnant of paramesonephric system?

Depressions on either side of the ridge where prostatic glands open and secrete an alkaline prostatic fluid?

A

Urethral crest

Seminal colliculus: Brings the sperm from the vas deferens and fluid from the seminal vesicle into the urethra

Prostatic utricle

Prostatic sinuses

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13
Q

Where is the prostate? Base? Apex?

What is the prostate made up of?

Where do prostatic ducts open?

A

Surrounds the prosthetic urethra

Base close to neck of bladder

Apex in contact with fascia on superior aspect of urethral sphincter and deep perineal muscles

2/3 gland; 1/3 fibromuscular tissue (smooth m. so it can contract during ejaculation)

Prostatic ducts open into prostatic sinuses

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14
Q

What is benign hypertrophy of the prostate?

What symptoms does it cause?

How do you detect enlargement and tumors?

A

Enlargement of the prostate; projects into the urinary bladder and impedes urination by distorting prostatic urethra

Urethral obstruction, nocturia, dysuria, urgency, bladder infections, kidney damage

Digital rectal exam; prostate feels hard and irregular in shape if malignant

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15
Q

Where does the vas deferens enter the abdomen and where does it go?

A

Comes from the epididymus and enters the abdomen by deep inguinal ring

Passes superior to all structures including ureters and iliac vessels

Passes superiorly and medially to ureter, expanding into an ampulla, before narrowing and joining the duct of the seminal vesicle

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16
Q

Where are the seminal vesicles?

What forms the ejaculatory duct?

What is the vascular supply of the seminal vesicles?

A

Bilateral, lobulated sacs lying lateral to the ampulla of the vas deferens

Duct of the seminal vesicle and vas deferens join on each side to form ejaculatory duct and enter the prostate

Umbilical and inferior vesicular arteries

17
Q

What is the innervation of the male reproductive organs?

What is the exception and why?

A

Sympathetic: T10-L2 inferior hypogastric plexus (similar route as bladder)

Parasympathetic: from pelvic splanchnic nerves

Visceral afferent fibers: travel with parasympathetic fibers from S2-S4

Exception is testis because they started superior and descended -> sympathetic from T10; parasympathetic from vagus N

18
Q

Where is the lymphatic drainage in the male reproductive system?

A

Vas deferens and inferior portion of seminal vesicles -> internal iliac nodes

Scrotal portion of vas deferens -> external iliac nodes

Testis -> lumbar LN

Prostate -> internal iliac nodes with some to sacral nodes

Bladder drains into -> external (superiolateral portion) and internal iliac nodes (fundus and neck)

19
Q

What makes the trigone in the interior bladder?

A

Outlined by the two openings of the ureters and the exit of the internal urethral orofice

Contains thin, smooth mucosa

20
Q

What are the parts of the male urethra?

A

Intramural

Prostatic

Membranous

Spongy

Penile