Anatomy RCR1 Renal
Anatomy RCR1 Renal
Anatomy RCR1 Renal
Urethra – males has three parts, the prostatic, membranous and penile
and is 20cm in length, female is only 3-4cm in length
CYTOSCOPY – evaluate bladder cancer, infections and obstruction
CATHETERISATION – to drain the bladder
Micturition – occurs afferent nerve is stimulated by stretching and travels
to parasympathetic nerves S2-S4 (pelvis splanchnic nerves),
parasympathetic efferent stimulate and bladder contracts, sphincters and
inhibited and relax
Imaging
o IV pyelogram – contrast excreted by kidneys, shows functioning
o Retrograde pyelogram – contrast inserted via urethra and can see
urinary tract
o Plain radiograph – will show calcified renal stones
o Ultrasound, CT, MRI
o Renal Arteriogram – to show renal arteries
Development of the Urinary System
KIDNEYS
1. Pronephros in the neck, 1 big nephron, not for blood but
interstitial fluid, not open to outside but into space in embryo
called coelom
2. Mesonephros a few primitive nephrons, grows v fast, not enough
nephrons to sustain life, drains into mesonephritic duct cloaca
(common space for urine and GI system)
3. Metanephros origin of the permanent kidney, two parts
- URETIC BUD – forms the renal pelvis, major and minor
calyces and collecting ducts
- METANEPHROGENIC BLASTEMA – forms the nephrons and
kidney mass
Origin – 3rd week, as flat and 3 layers of endo, meso and ectoderm, renal
system comes from the mesoderm and the intermediatrial mesoderm
(not paraxial or lateral planes)
Anomalies = bifid renal pelvis (2 renal pelvises), duplicated ureters (2
uretic buds)
NEPHRON (does not include collecting duct) forms from the
metanephrogenic blastema, glomerular shape invaginated around
Bowman’s capsule and nephron fuses with the collecting duct
Anomalies = polycystic kidney disease, where collecting duct and nephron
did not fuse, still filters blood therefore no way out, the collecting duct
dilates and the cysts form filled with urine
POSITION OF KIDNEY – L is higher than the R due to the liver, protected
by the rib cage, kidneys ascend, begins near pelvis or iliac arteries and
ascends upwards
Anomalies – ectopic pelvic kidney (remains in pelvic region), horseshoe
kidney (fuse together and stuck below the inferior mesenteric artery),
accessory renal arteries (in 20%, new arteries made to supply the kidney
but the old ones remain so have multiple renal arteries)
BLADDER AND URETHRA – note that the pelvic diaphragm, the skeletal
muscle part is the external urinary sphincter
Urachus (allantois), filtrate is stored here, cloaca is split into anterior
(urogenital sinus), and the posterior (anal canal) which is split by the
urorectal septum, closed part of the urachus or the remnant part of the
urachus is the medial umbilical ligament
Anomalies – urachial fistule (abnormal passage, where the urachus did
not close so into outside world), urachial cyst (additional space where
urachus was previously, a dilatation filled with urine)