Anatomy and Embryology of Bladder: Dr. Deepesh Kalra Institute of Urology Madras Medical College, Chennai
Anatomy and Embryology of Bladder: Dr. Deepesh Kalra Institute of Urology Madras Medical College, Chennai
Anatomy and Embryology of Bladder: Dr. Deepesh Kalra Institute of Urology Madras Medical College, Chennai
Bladder
Dr. Deepesh Kalra
Institute of urology
Madras medical college, chennai
Anatomy
• It is a hollow musculomembranous sac which acts as a reservoir of urine.
• When "Empty" , the adult urinary bladder is located in the "Lesser pelvis" lying
partially superior to and partially postetior to the pubic Bones.
Surfaces -
• Superior surface.
• Posterior surface.
• Bladder can be divided into-
• The dome and posterior surface of the bladder are covered by parietal
peritoneum, which reflects superiorly to the seminal vesicles and is continuous
with the anterior rectal peritoneum.
• In females, the posterior peritoneal reflection is continuous with the uterus and
vagina and is referred to as the anterior cul-de-sac or vesicouterine pouch.
Bladder Compartments
Urothelium -
The apical cells (umbrella cells) comprise the layer that is in contact with urine.
• “Functional center” for localized control of the bladder, coordinating the activities
of the urothelium and detrusor smooth muscle.
Stroma -
The main constituents of bladder wall stroma are collagen and elastin in a matrix
composed of proteoglycans.
Most of the bladder wall collagen is found in the connective tissue outside the muscle
bundles.
Elastin fibers are sparse in the bladder compared with collagen but are found in all layers
of the bladder wall.
Smooth Muscle -
Histologic examination of the bladder body reveals that myofibrils are arranged
into fascicles (bundles) in random directions.
The motor innervation of the bladder smooth muscle is from the postganglionic
parasympathetic nerve fibers
Arterial supply -
In males, inferior vesical arteries supply the fundus and neck of the bladder.
In females, vaginal arteries replace the inferior vesical arteries and send small
branches to posteroinferior parts of the bladder.
Obturator and inferior gluteal arteries also supply small branches to the bladder.
Venous supply -
The venous return of the bladder is a rich network of vessels that generally
parallels the arteries in both anatomic course and name.
The vast majority of venous return from the bladder drains into the internal iliac
vein.
Lymphatic drainage -
The lymphatic drainage of the bladder is into the obturator, external iliac, internal
iliac (hypogastric), and common iliac lymph nodes
INNERVATION
• Key signalling factors in bladder development include shh, TGF-β, Bmp4, and
Fgfr2.
• By the 10th week of gestation the bladder is a cylindric tube lined by a single
layer of cuboidal cells.
• By the 12th week the urachus involutes to become a fibrous cord, which becomes
the median umbilical ligament.
• During gestation the bladder wall muscle thickness increases and the relative
collagen content decreases, the amount of elastic fibers increases.
Formation of Trigone
By day 33 of gestation, the
common excretory ducts (the
portion of nephric ducts distal
to the origin of ureteric buds)
dilate and connect to the
urogenital sinus.
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[accessed Sep 06 2018]
UV junction development
• The ending of the ureter fuses with the urogenital sinus by day 37,
the subsequent caudal growth remains vague, mainly the distention and
intravesical submucosal enlargement occurs which is considered most
responsible for the anti-reflux mechanism.
• During gestational weeks 30-40, the intravesical ureter has a mean length of 4
mm.
• The ratio of tunnel length to ureteral diameter at the ureterovesical junction was
found to average 5 : 1 in Paquin’s study
Development of bladder neck and continence mechanism
• At this time the smooth muscle layer becomes thicker at the level of bladder
neck.
Bladder Defects
Urachal defects -
• Exstrophy of the bladder is probably due to failure of the lateral body wall folds to close
in the midline in the pelvic region.
• In addition to the closure defect, normal development of the urorectal septum is altered,
such that anal canal mal- formations and imperforate anus occur.
• Furthermore, because the body folds do not fuse, the genital sweilings are widely spaced
resulting in defects in the external genitalia.