Difference between revisions of "Urinary Bladder - Anatomy & Physiology"

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* The bladder is where urine is stored before being expelled by the body through the [[Process of Micturition | micturition reflex]].
 
* The bladder is where urine is stored before being expelled by the body through the [[Process of Micturition | micturition reflex]].

Revision as of 22:07, 6 August 2008

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  • The bladder is where urine is stored before being expelled by the body through the micturition reflex.
  • Without a bladder urinary continence would be impossible.

Anatomy

  • It is a hollow, muscular organ
  • It is divided for descriptive purposes into three parts
    • Cranial Pole
    • Intermediate body
    • Caudal neck
  • Its size and posistion are determined by how full it is.
    • When empty the bladder wall is wrinkled and thicker
    • When full and distended the folds dissapear and the wall appears thinner
  • The paired uteric folds are visible even when the bladder is full.
    • They extend from the ureteral opening to the neck of the bladder
    • Here they merge
    • Forms the urethral crest - continues into the urethra

Muscles of the Bladder

The three muscular components of the bladder described below play a pivotal part in the micturition reflex.

Detrusor Muscle

Network of smooth muscle fibres within the bladder wall which are supplied by both parasympathetic and sympathetic nerves.

Internal Urethral Sphincter

Its a thickening of the bladder musculature which is continous with the detrusor and therefore is smooth muscle. However unlike the detrusor its innervation is purely from sympathetic fibres.

External Urethral Sphincter

Unlike the internal sphincter the external sphincter is composed of striated muscle fibres which are under the voluntary control of the somatic nervous system


The Ligaments of the Bladder

  • Two lateral ligaments
    • Insert in the dorsal abdominal wall
    • Within them are the residual umbilical vessels
  • Median ligament
    • Connects the bladder to pelvic floor and linea alba

Blood Supply, Innervation and Lymphatic Drainage

Blood Supply - Caudal vesicular artery

Sympathetic Innervation - Via hypogastric nerve from the caudal mesenteric ganglion

Parasympathetic Innervation - Pudendal nerve

Lymphatic Drainage - Iliosacral lymph nodes