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Anatomy, physiology and pathology of the urinary bladder

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Title: Anatomy, physiology and pathology of the urinary bladder


1
Anatomy, physiology and pathology of the urinary
bladder
  • Dr Andrew Potter
  • Registrar
  • Department of Radiation Oncology
  • Royal Adelaide Hospital

2
Anatomy
3
Overview
  • Hollow pelvic organ
  • Strong muscular walls
  • Part of the lower urinary tract
  • Characterised by distensibility
  • Primary function isto store urine

4
Structure - macro
  • Shape, size, position and relations vary with
    amount of urine contained and age of person
  • An empty bladder (eg in cadaver) has a triangular
    pyramid shape
  • Always contains some urine in life ? usually more
    or less rounded shape
  • Contains about 500mL of urine when full

5
Structure - macro
  • Empty (cadaveric) bladder has 4 surfaces
  • Superior
  • 2 infero-lateral surfaces (facing inferiorly,
    laterally and anteriorly)
  • in contact with fascia covering levator ani
    muscles
  • posterior surface
  • postero-inferior surface fundus/base
  • in males related to the rectum (separated from
    rectum by ampullae of ductus deferentes and
    seminal vesicles)
  • in females there is a firm connective tissue
    union with anterior vaginal wall and upper part
    of cervix with no intervening peritoneum
  • peritoneal reflection between bladder and rectum
    (rectovesical pouch)

6
Structure - macro
  • Walls are smooth muscle the detrusor muscle
  • 3 layers
  • external and internal layers of longitudinal
    fibres
  • middle layer of circular fibres
  • Muscle layers forms the involuntary internal
    sphincter near the balder neck
  • Some fibres run radially, assisting to open the
    internal urethral orifice
  • Internal mucous membrane
  • Transitional epithelium can undergo significant
    stretching
  • loosely connected to muscular wall, except at its
    base (the trigone)

7
Structure - macro
  • Wall folds into rugae in empty bladder, except in
    trigone where it is firmly attached at all times
  • Trigone
  • Least mobile part of bladder
  • Triangular area with internal ureteric orifices
    and internal urethral orifice at its angles
  • Superior border of trigone formed by
    interureteric fold
  • In females is stabilised by connective tissue
    surrounding the upper urethra at the front of the
    vagina

8
Structure - macro
  • Ureters pass obliquely through bladder wall
    antero-medially
  • prevents urine backflow increase in bladder
    pressure opposes ureteric walls
  • In males, posterior to the internal urethral
    orifice is an elevation uvula vesicae
    produced by middle lobe of prostate
  • In males the muscle fibres in the neck region are
    continuous with connective tissue stroma of
    prostate

9
Bladder - gross anatomy
10
Position and relations
  • In adults, the empty bladder lies in pelvis minor
    (cf children ? in abdomen)
  • Posterior and slightly superior to pelvis bones
  • Superior to pelvis floor, posterior to pubic
    symphysis
  • As bladder fills it ascends into pelvis major (a
    very full bladder may ascend up to level of
    umbilicus)
  • Separated from pubic bones by retropubic space
  • In males
  • peritoneum is reflected over superior surfaces of
    ductus deferentes and seminal vesicles.
  • Bladder relatively free within extraperitoneal
    fatty tissue, except for neck where it is held
    firmly by pubo-prostatic ligaments

11
Position and relations
  • Bladder bed
  • Entire bladder enveloped by loose connective
    tissue vesical fascia which includes vesical
    venous plexus
  • Lateral walls of bladder bed pubic bones,
    obturator internus, levator ani
  • Posteriorly superior vagina, cervix, uterus,
    rectum
  • Anterior end (apex) of bladder points anteriorly
    towards superior edge of pubic symphysis
  • From apex the median umbilical fold of peritoneum
    passes superiorly to umbilicus
  • Fold is raised by median umbilical ligament

12
Position and relations
  • Inferior part (where fundus and infero-lateral
    surfaces converge) bladder neck
  • In males this is where bladder neck opens to
    prostatic urethra
  • In males bladder neck rests on prostate
  • In females related to pelvic fascia surrounding
    the upper urethra
  • In females superior part covered by peritoneum
    that sweeps up over the anterior abdominal wall
  • Reflected to the under-surface of the uterus as
    the vesicouterine pouch (but stops short of
    reaching the vaginal fornix)

13
Position and relations
  • Male
  • Female

14
Arterial supply
  • Branches of internal iliac arteries
  • Superior vesical arteries (branches of umbilical
    arteries) supply antero-superior part
  • In females vaginal artery supplies
    postero-inferior part
  • In males the inferior vesical arteries (branches
    of internal iliacs) supply fundus
  • Obturator and inferior gluteal arteries also
    supply small branches

15
Venous drainage
  • Veins correspond to arteries and are tributaries
    of internal iliac veins
  • In males the vesical venous plexus combines with
    prostatic plexus and envelopes bladder base,
    prostate, seminal vesicles, ductus deferentes and
    inferior ends of ureters
  • Vesical venous plexus ? inferior vesical veins ?
    internal iliac veins
  • (may also drain via sacral veins ? vertebral
    venous plexuses)
  • In females the vesical venous plexus communicates
    with veins in the base of the broad ligament

16
Lymphatic drainage
  • Superior part ? external iliac LNs
  • Inferior part ? internal iliac LNs
  • Some drainage from neck region into sacral or
    common iliac LNs

17
Innervation
  • Parasympathetic supply from pelvic splanchnic
    nerves
  • Motor to detrusor muscles
  • Inhibitory to internal sphincter
  • ? when bladder stretches these are stimulated ?
    muscle contracts, sphincter relaxes ? urine flows
    to urethra
  • Sympathetic fibres
  • Derived from T11, T12, L1, L2 nerves
  • Probably inhibitory to bladder
  • Nerve supply forms the vesical nerves plexus
    consisting of both sympathetic and
    parasympathetic nerves
  • Continuous with inferior hypogastric plexus
  • Sensory fibres are visceral and transmit pain (eg
    from over-distention)

18
Innervation
19
Structure - micro
  • 3 layers of smooth muscles and elastic fibres
    that contract during micturition
  • Innermost and outermost layers are longitudinal,
    with middle layer being circular in orientation
  • Urinary or transitional epithelial lining
  • Basal cells are cuboidal or columnar
  • Surface cells are tall columnar
  • Rests on a basement membrane
  • Surface has inflexible surface plaques with some
    normal membrane in between acting as a hinge to
    allow epithelium to concertina (? structures
    called fusiform vesicles)
  • Impermeable to urine
  • Prevents urine permeating (potentially toxic)
  • Prevents water being drawn into hypertonic urine

20
Structure - micro
21
Development
  • Urorectal septum divides the cloaca posterior
    rectum and anterior urogenital sinus
  • Bladder develops from vesical part of urogenital
    sinus
  • Trigone derived from caudal ends of mesonephric
    ducts
  • Transitional epithelium derived from endoderm of
    vesical part of urogenital sinus
  • Walls formed from splanchnic mesenchyme
  • Embryonic urachus forms the adult median
    umbilical ligament
  • In children the bladder lies in the abdomen, even
    when empty
  • Enters pelvis minor at about age 6, but does not
    lie in pelvis minor until after puberty

22
Physiology
23
Micturition - anatomy
  • Micturition centre is located where in the brain?
  • Frontal lobe
  • Function of micturition center (excitatory or
    inhibitory?)
  • Send tonically inhibitory signals to the detrusor
    muscle to prevent the bladder from emptying
    (contracting) until a socially acceptable time
    and place to urinate is available.

24
Pontine micturition centre
  • The major relay centre between the brain and the
    bladder
  • What is the function of the pons?
  • Coordinating the activities of the urinary
    sphincters and the bladder so that they work in
    synergy
  • What is the specific anatomic location?
  • Pontine micturition centre
  • The PMC coordinates the urethral sphincter
    relaxation and detrusor contraction to facilitate
    urination

25
Pontine micturition centre
  • Bladder filling ? detrusor muscle stretch
    receptors ? signal to the pons ? brain
  • Perception of this signal (bladder fullness) as a
    sudden desire to go to the bathroom
  • Normally, the brain sends an inhibitory signal to
    the pons to inhibit the bladder from contracting
    until a bathroom is found.
  • Brain ? deactivating signal to PMC
  • Urge to urinate disappears
  • When urination appropriate, brain sends
    excitatory signals to the pons, allowing voiding

26
Pontine micturition centre
  • Excitatory or inhibitory?
  • Excitatory
  • Stimulation of the PMC causes what actions of
    the
  • Urethral sphincter?
  • Open
  • Detrusor?
  • Contract
  • The PMC is affected by emotions
  • Hence, some urinate when they are excited or
    scared
  • The brains control of the PMC is part of the
    social training that children experience during
    growth and development
  • Brain takes over the control of the pons at age
  • 2 - 4 years

27
Spinal cord
  • Function
  • Long communication pathway between the brainstem
    and the sacral spinal cord
  • Sensory information from bladder ? Sacral cord ?
    Pons ? Brain ? Pons ? Spinal cord ? Sacral cord ?
    Bladder
  • Normal bladder filling/emptying
  • Spinal cord acts as an important intermediary
    between the pons and the sacral cord
  • Intact spinal cord is critical for normal
    micturition

28
Spinal cord
  • Sacral spinal cord what is the significance?
  • Sacral reflex center
  • Responsible for bladder contractions
  • Primitive voiding center
  • In infants, the brain is not mature enough to
    command the bladder
  • SRC controls urination in infants and young
    children
  • When urine fills the infant bladder, an
    excitatory signal ? sacral cord ? spinal reflex
    center ? detrusor contraction ? involuntary
    detrusor contractions with coordinated voiding

29
Bladder neuroanatomy
  • Sympathetic receptors
  • Adrenergic
  • _ ?1
  • Trigone, bladder neck, urethra
  • Maintain continence by contraction of bladder
    neck smooth muscle
  • ?2-Adrenergics
  • Bladder neck and body of bladder
  • Inhibitory when active to
  • Relax bladder neck on void
  • Relax bladder body for storage (minor)

30
Bladder neuroanatomy
  • Parasympathetic receptors
  • Muscarinic
  • Type
  • Cholinergic
  • Anatomic location
  • Bladder, trigone, bladder neck, urethra

31
Bladder neuroanatomy
32
Normal micturition - autonomic nervous system
  • Normally, bladder and the internal urethral
    sphincter primarily are under sympathetic control
  • SNS activity
  • Bladder can increase capacity without increasing
    detrusor resting pressure
  • Stimulates the internal urinary sphincter to
    remain tightly closed
  • Inhibits parasympathetic stimulation
  • Micturition reflex is inhibited

33
Normal micturition - autonomic nervous system
  • Parasympathetic nervous system
  • Stimulates detrusor to contract
  • Immediately preceding parasympathetic
    stimulation, sympathetic influence on the
    internal urethral sphincter becomes suppressed so
    that the internal sphincter relaxes and opens
  • Pudendal nerve is inhibited ? external sphincter
    opens ? facilitation of voluntary urination

34
Normal micturition - somatics
  • Regulates the actions of voluntary muscles
  • External urinary sphincter
  • Pelvic diaphragm
  • Innervation is via the.
  • Pudendal nerve
  • Originates from the nucleus of Onuf
  • Activation of the pudendal nerve causes ?
    contraction of the external sphincter and the
    pelvic floor muscles
  • Neuropraxia of pudendal may occur with.
  • Difficult or prolonged vaginal delivery, causing
    stress urinary incontinence

35
Normal micturition - physiology
  • Normal Micturition - Physiology
  • 2 phases
  • Filling and emptying
  • Normal micturition cycle requires that the
    urinary bladder and the urethral sphincter work
    together as a coordinated unit to store and empty
    urine
  • Storage
  • Bladder is a low-pressure receptacle
  • Urinary sphincter closed with high resistance
    to urinary flow
  • Emptying
  • Bladder contracts to expel urine
  • Urinary sphincter opens to allow urinary flow

36
Normal micturition - physiology
  • Filling phase
  • Bladder
  • Accumulates increasing volumes of urine
  • Pressure inside the bladder remains low
  • Pressure within the bladder must be lower than
    the urethral pressure during the filling phase
  • Bladder filling dependent on
  • Intrinsic viscoelastic properties of the bladder
  • Inhibition of the parasympathetic nerves
  • Bladder filling primarily is a active event

37
Normal micturition - physiology
  • Bladder filling
  • Sympathetic nerves also facilitate urine storage
  • Inhibition of the parasympathetic nerves from
    triggering bladder contractions
  • Directly cause relaxation and expansion of the
    detrusor muscle.
  • Close the bladder neck by constricting the
    internal urethral sphincter
  • Thus, sympathetic input to the lower urinary
    tract is constantly active during bladder filling.

38
Normal Micturition
  • During bladder filling - pudendal nerve becomes
    excited.
  • Pudendal nerve stimulation ? contraction of the
    external urethral sphincter
  • Urethral pressure maintained by the continence
    mechanism, which is composed of ??
  • Contraction of the external sphincter
  • Contraction of the internal sphincter
  • Pressure gradients
  • Continence urethral pressure gt or lt bladder
    pressure
  • Incontinence urethral pressure lt or gt
    intravesical pressure is abnormally high

39
Normal Micturition - Physiology
  • Pressure Gradients
  • During bladder filling
  • Small ? in intravesical pressure
  • When the urethral sphincter is closed, the
    intraurethral pressure gt the intravesical
    pressure
  • With ? intraabdominal pressure (cough, sneeze,
    laugh, physical activity), some pressure
    transmitted to both the bladder and urethra
  • If the pressure is evenly transmitted to both the
    bladder and urethra, Ø incontinence
  • If pressure transmitted to the bladder is gt
    urethra, stress incontinence results

40
Normal Micturition - Emptying
  • Involuntary (reflex) or voluntary
  • Infants involuntarily reflex void when the volume
    of urine exceeds the voiding threshold
  • Bladder wall stretch receptors ? sacral cord ?
    pudendal nerve ?
  • relaxation of the levator ani ?relaxation of
    pelvic floor muscle
  • Opens external sphincter
  • Also, sympathetic nerves ? relaxation of internal
    sphincter
  • Parasympathetic nerves ? detrusor contraction
  • Bladder pressure gt urethral pressure ? urinary
    flow

41
Normal Micturition - Emptying
  • A repetitious cycle of bladder filling and
    emptying occurs in newborn infants
  • As the infant brain develops, the PMC also
    matures and gradually assumes voiding control
  • During childhood, primitive voiding reflex
    becomes suppressed and the brain dominates
    bladder function
  • Toilet training usually is successful at age 2-4
    years
  • Primitive voiding reflex may reappear in people
    with SCI

42
Delayed/Voluntary Voiding
  • Healthy adults are aware of bladder filling and
    can willfully initiate or delay voiding
  • Normally, the PMC functions as an on-off switch
    that is activated by stretch receptors in the
    bladder wall and is modulated by inhibitory and
    excitatory neurologic influences from the brain.
  • When voiding must be delayed
  • Brain bombards the PMC with inhibitory signals to
    prevent detrusor contractions
  • Individual actively contracts the levator muscles
    to keep the external sphincter closed

43
Normal Micturition Delayed Emptying
  • Voiding coordination of both the ANS and
    somatic nervous system, which are in turn
    controlled by the PMC located in the brainstem
    and regulated by the brain

44
Pathology
45
Urinary tract infections
  • Predisposed by obstruction and stasis
  • Usually gram-negative coliforms
  • Most commonly E. coli and Proteus
  • More common in women (shorter urethra)
  • Treated with antibiotics
  • May progress to acute or chronic pyelonephritis

46
Urinary calculi (stones)
  • Predisposing factors include increased urine
    concentration, or reduced solubility (chronically
    abnormal pH)
  • Low fluid intake, urinary stasis, persistent
    UTIs
  • Most commonly (80) calcium oxalate stones or
    phosphate

47
Bladder neoplasms
  • Tumours are derived from transitional cells of
    bladder urothelium
  • Mostly transitional cell carcinoma
  • Caused by carcinogens excreted in urine
  • Occupational (up to 20)/environmental exposure
  • Cigarette smoking, analine dyes, rubber, pelvic
    irradiation
  • Genetic predisposition
  • 25 have GSTM1 enzyme deficiency (gene deletion)
  • p53 mutations

48
Transitional cell carcinoma
  • Of all bladder carcinomas
  • 90 are transitional cell carcinomas
  • 5 are squamous carcinoma
  • 2 are adenocarcinomas
  • TCCs should be regarded a 'field change' disease
    with a spectrum of aggression
  • 80 of TCCs are superficial and well
    differentiated
  • Only 20 progress to muscle invasion
  • Associated with good prognosis
  • 20 of TCCs are high-grade and muscle invasive
  • 50 have muscle invasion at time of presentation
  • Associated with poor prognosis

49
TCC - presentation
  • Painless haematuria
  • Sterile pyuria
  • Bladder irritability
  • Treatment-resistant infection

50
Superficial TCC
  • Requires transurethral resection and regular
    cystoscopic follow-up
  • Consider prophylactic chemotherapy if risk factor
    for recurrence or invasion (e.g. high grade)
  • Consider immunotherapy
  • BCG attenuated strain of Mycobacterium bovis
  • Reduces risk of recurrence and progression
  • 50-70 response rate recorded
  • Occasionally associated with development of
    systemic mycobacterial infection

51
Carcinoma in-situ
  • Carcinoma-in-situ is an aggressive disease
  • Often associated with positive cytology
  • 50 patients progress to muscle invasion
  • Consider immunotherapy
  • If fails patient may need radical cystectomy

52
Invasive TCC
  • Choices are between radical cystectomy and
    radiotherapy ( chemotherapy)
  • Radical cystectomy has an operative mortality of
    about 5
  • Urinary diversion achieved by
  • Valve rectal pouch - modified ureterosigmoidostomy
  • Ileal conduit
  • Neo-bladder
  • Local recurrence rates after surgery are
    approximately 15 and after radiotherapy alone
    50
  • Pre-operative radiotherapy is no better than
    surgery alone
  • Adjuvant chemotherapy may have a role

53
Invasive TCC
54
SCC and adenocarcinoma
  • Squamous cell carcinoma
  • Uncommon
  • Derived from metaplastic epithelium
  • Usually from chronic irritation by a calculus
  • Adenocarcinoma
  • Uncommon
  • Usually in the dome region from embryonic remnants
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