Diagnostic Imaging

Page 236

THE PELVIS nerves. The obturator nerve descends medial to the psoas muscle, runs along the lateral pelvic wall and through the upper part of the obturator foramen into the thigh. It is posteromedial to the common iliac vein in the pelvis. The femoral nerve, surrounded by fat, descends between the psoas and iliacus muscles, passing under the inguinal ligament into the thigh. The sciatic nerve is the largest in the body. It is formed from the lumbosacral plexus on the anterior surface of the sacrum and piriformis. It passes through the greater sciatic foramen into the gluteal region. Nerves to the organs of the pelvis are derived from the lumbosacral plexus, which lies on the sacrum and piriformis muscle. THE LOWER URINARY TRACT The pelvic ureters The distal ureters enter the pelvis anterior to the psoas muscle. They pass anterior to the bifurcation of the iliac vessels and run on the lateral wall of the pelvis. Just in front of the ischial spine they turn medially to enter the posterolateral aspect of the bladder. The distal ureter lies above the seminal vesicles in the male and is crossed by the vas deferens. The distal ureter passes above the lateral vaginal fornix in the female, lateral to the cervix and under the uterine vessels in the broad ligament. The intravesical ureter tunnels obliquely through the bladder wall. The bladder muscle exerts a sphincter-like action on the lower ureter. The bladder (see Fig. 6.12) This is a pyramidal muscular organ when empty. It has a triangular-shaped base posteriorly. The ureters enter the posterolateral angles and the urethra leaves inferiorly at the narrow neck, which is surrounded by the (involuntary) internal urethral sphincter. It has one superior and two inferolateral walls, which meet at an apex behind the pubic symphysis.

Fig. 6.12

The urethra is separated from the pubic symphysis by the retropubic fatty space (of Retzius), which contains a venous plexus as well as nerves and lymphatics. Perivesical fat surrounds the bladder. The obturator internus muscle is anterolateral and the levator ani muscle inferolateral to this. Superiorly it is loosely covered by peritoneum, which separates it from loops of small bowel and sigmoid colon. In the female, the body of the uterus rests on its postero¬ superior surface and the cervix and vagina are posterior, with the rectum behind. In the male, the termination of the vasa and the seminal vesicles are between the posterior bladder and the rectum. In the female, the bladder neck rests on the pelvic fascia. In the male it is fused with the prostate. The trigone is the triangular inner wall of the bladder between the ureteric and urethral orifices, as seen on cystoscopy. This part of the wall is smooth; the remainder of the bladder wall is coarsely trabeculated by criss-cross muscle fibres. The bladder is an extraperitoneal structure. As it fills it becomes ovoid and rises into the abdomen, stripping the loose peritoneum off the anterior abdominal wall. The peritoneum is loose over the bladder, except posteriorly where the ureters enter. The bladder is relatively fixed inferiorly via condensations of pelvic fascia, which attach it to the back of the pubis, the lateral walls of the pelvis and the rectum. Its continuity with the prostate in the male makes it even more immobile at this point owing to the strong puboprostatic ligaments. Peritoneal reflections In the female, the peritoneum is reflected from the superior surface of the bladder to the anterior surface of the uterus. The peritoneum is further reflected from the posterior part of the uterus to the rectum, and this fold is known as the pouch of Douglas or cul-de-sac. In the male, the peritoneum is reflected off the bladder to the rectum, forming the rectovesical pouch or cul-de-sac. These peritoneal pouches usually contain loops of bowel.

Male bladder and urethra: (a) sagittal section; (b) diagram of prostatic urethra to show ducts.

227


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Radiology of the breast

3min
pages 319-321

The arteries

7min
pages 311-313

Lymphatic drainage

1min
pages 317-318

The veins

2min
pages 314-315

The bones

15min
pages 282-288

The joints

43min
pages 289-307

The muscles

4min
pages 308-310

The joints

37min
pages 263-276

The female reproductive tract

13min
pages 245-250

The male reproductive organs

16min
pages 238-244

The veins

3min
pages 280-281

Cross-sectional anatomy

8min
pages 251-255

The muscles

4min
pages 277-278

The bones

12min
pages 256-262

The arteries

1min
page 279

The sigmoid colon, rectum and anal canal

5min
pages 230-232

The male urethra

4min
page 237

The bony pelvis, muscles and ligaments

3min
pages 224-225

Cross-sectional anatomy of the upper abdomen

8min
pages 216-223

The pelvic floor

7min
pages 226-229

Blood vessels, lymphatics and nerves of the pelvis

7min
pages 233-235

The lower urinary tract

3min
page 236

The peritoneal spaces of the abdomen

14min
pages 211-215

Spleen

6min
pages 194-195

Portal venous system

2min
pages 196-197

The kidneys

17min
pages 198-202

The adrenal glands

8min
pages 205-206

Veins of the posterior abdominal wall

5min
pages 209-210

The ureter

5min
pages 203-204

The inferior vena cava

4min
page 208

The abdominal aorta

1min
page 207

Pancreas

10min
pages 190-193

Biliary system

12min
pages 185-189

Liver

17min
pages 179-184

Small intestine

2min
page 171

Duodenum

6min
pages 168-170

Large intestine

10min
pages 174-178

lleocaecal valve

4min
page 172

Stomach

9min
pages 163-167

Appendix

2min
page 173

Anterior abdominal wall

4min
pages 160-162

The mediastinum on the chest radiograph

4min
pages 152-153

Cross-sectional anatomy

6min
pages 154-159

Important nerves of the mediastinum

1min
page 151

The oesophagus

8min
pages 145-147

The azygos system

2min
pages 149-150

The great vessels

9min
pages 142-144

The trachea and bronchi

5min
pages 125-126

The heart

13min
pages 134-141

The pleura

2min
pages 123-124

The mediastinal divisions

3min
page 133

The lungs

13min
pages 127-132

The diaphragm

5min
pages 120-122

The thoracic cage

8min
pages 116-119

Relevant MRI anatomy - dorsolumbar spine

11min
pages 110-115

Relevant MRI anatomy - cervical spine

7min
pages 107-109

Intervertebral discs

2min
page 102

Ligaments of the vertebral column

4min
page 101

Blood supply of the spinal cord

6min
pages 105-106

Spinal meninges

2min
page 104

Vertebral column

12min
pages 94-99

Joints of the vertebral column

2min
page 100

Venous drainage of the brain

8min
pages 89-93

Meninges

4min
page 81

Ventricles, cisterns, CSF production and flow ventricles

19min
pages 75-80

Cerebellum

3min
pages 73-74

Brainstem

7min
pages 70-72

Thalamus, hypothalamus and pineal gland

4min
pages 66-67

White matter of the hemispheres

7min
pages 62-65

The neck vessels

19min
pages 48-57

Pituitary gland

2min
page 68

Limbic lobe

2min
page 69

The thyroid and parathyroid glands

5min
pages 45-47

The larynx

8min
pages 42-44

The orbital contents

10min
pages 30-33

The oral cavity and salivary glands

6min
pages 26-29

The nasopharynx and related spaces

9min
pages 39-41

The ear

5min
pages 34-36

The mandible and teeth

7min
pages 22-25

The pharynx and related spaces

4min
pages 37-38

The nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses

6min
pages 20-21

The skull and facial bones

23min
pages 10-19
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