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Vesical venous plexus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Vesical venous plexus
The veins of the right half of the male pelvis.
Details
Drains fromUrinary bladder
Drains toInternal iliac vein
ArterySuperior vesical artery
Inferior vesical artery
Identifiers
Latinplexus venosus vesicalis
TA98A12.3.10.012
TA25039
FMA18934
Anatomical terminology

The vesical venous plexus is a venous plexus situated at the fundus of the urinary bladder. It collects venous blood from the urinary bladder in both sexes, from the accessory sex glands in males, and from the corpora cavernosa of clitoris in females (via the v. dorsalis profunda clitoridis).[1] It drains into the internal iliac veins via several vesical veins.[citation needed]

Structure

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The vesical venous plexus envelops the inferior part of the bladder and the base of the prostate.[citation needed]

Anastomoses

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It communicates with the pudendal and prostatic plexuses.[citation needed]

References

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Public domain This article incorporates text in the public domain from page 676 of the 20th edition of Gray's Anatomy (1918)

  1. ^ Sobotta Anatomy Textbook - English Edition with Latin Nomenclature. Friedrich Paulsen, Tobias M. Böckers, J. Waschke, Stephan Winkler, Katja Dalkowski, Jörg Mair, Sonja Klebe, Elsevier ClinicalKey (1st ed.). Munich. 2018. p. 397. ISBN 978-0-7020-6760-0. OCLC 1132300315.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
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