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Ridley's The Vulva. Группа авторов
Читать онлайн.Название Ridley's The Vulva
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9781119755166
Автор произведения Группа авторов
Жанр Медицина
Издательство John Wiley & Sons Limited
Figure 2.12 The urogenital diaphragm.
Figure 2.13 The superficial structures of the perineum.
Anal triangle
The anal triangle is the triangular area bounded by the ischial tuberosities and the coccyx. The anal canal lies within this area. The ischiorectal fossae lie laterally to the anal canal (Figure 2.14). These are pyramid‐shaped areas bounded by ischium and obturator internus laterally, levator ani medially, and the perianal skin inferiorly. The fossae contain fat and connective tissue, and the nerves to the anus, perineum, and external genitalia traverse this space. The anal canal is the terminal 2.5–3.5 cm of the large intestine and passes through the levator ani. It has an internal involuntary sphincter derived from the smooth muscle of the rectum around its upper two‐thirds and an external voluntary sphincter muscle around the lower two‐thirds. This sphincter muscle blends with the puborectalis muscle.
The pelvic floor
The pelvic floor (pelvic diaphragm) is composed of sheets of muscles arranged around the midline urethra, vagina, and anal canal. The main functions of the pelvic floor are to support the pelvic organs and to help to maintain continence when intra‐abdominal pressure is raised during episodes of coughing, sneezing, and muscular effort. This pelvic floor is made up of the ischiococcygeus, iliococcygeus, and pubococcygeus muscles, which have a bilateral linear origin from the white line overlying the obturator fascia on the side wall of the pelvis. This extends from the ischial spine posteriorly to the pubic bone anteriorly. The muscles reach their midline insertion into the sacrum, coccyx, anococcygeal raphe, and perineal body, and therefore form a gutter‐shaped pelvic floor, which slopes downwards and forwards (Figure 2.15).
Figure 2.14 A coronal section through the anal canal and ischiorectal fossa.
Ischiococcygeus muscle
This arises from the ischial spine and is inserted into the fifth sacral vertebra and the coccyx.
Iliococcygeus muscle
The iliococcygeus arises from the ischial spine and posterior half of the fibrous linear origin and, overlying the pelvic surface of the ischiococcygeus, is inserted into the coccyx and anococcygeal raphe. This raphe is the interdigitation of muscle fibres from the right and left sides, and extends from the tip of the coccyx to the anorectal junction.
Figure 2.15 The muscles of the pelvic walls and pelvic floor.
Pubococcygeus muscle
The pubococcygeus arises from the anterior half of the linear origin and from the posterior surface of the body of the pubis. The fibres arising from the fibrous linear origin sweep backwards on the pelvic surface of the iliococcygeus to be inserted into the anococcygeal raphe. Those fibres arising from the pubic bone form a muscle sling around the anorectal junction, producing a forward angulation of this junction. This part of the pubococcygeus is referred to as the puborectalis, and it lies beneath the anococcygeal raphe and intermingles with the deep part of the external anal sphincter. The most medial fibres arising from the pubis form a muscle sling around the vagina (sphincter vaginae) which unite with the perineal body behind the vagina. The midline gap between the medial edges of the sphincter vaginae is occupied by the pubovesical ligaments and the deep dorsal vein of the clitoris.
The inguinofemoral region
The femoral triangle is a gutter‐shaped depression below the groin. The base is formed by the inguinal ligament, and its apex is situated medially and inferiorly. The inguinal ligament is the lower free margin of the external oblique muscle of the anterior abdominal wall and extends from the anterior superior spine of the iliac bone laterally to the tubercle on the body of the pubic bone medially. Midway between these two points, the external iliac artery becomes the femoral artery and enters the femoral triangle deep to the inguinal ligament and the deep fascia of the thigh (fascia lata). A short downward extension of the abdominal fascia (femoral sheath) is created when the external iliac vessels enter the triangle, and this sheath encloses the femoral artery laterally, the femoral vein centrally, and the femoral canal medially. The long saphenous vein passes through the saphenous opening in the fascia lata to enter the femoral vein at the medial end of the inguinal ligament.
Table 2.2 Blood supply, innervation, and lymphatic drainage of the vulva.
Arterial supply | Venous drainage | Innervation | Lymphatic drainage | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mons pubis | Superficial external pudendal artery which is a branch of the femoral artery. | Pudendal veins to the long saphenous vein | Branches of the perineal nerve | To superficial inguinal nodes and then to deep femoral nodes and pelvic nodes |
Labia majora | Labial branches of the internal pudendal artery | Tributaries to the superficial external pudendal vein which then drain to the great saphenous vein | Labial branches of the perineal nerve | Superficial inguinal nodes and the inferior aspect to the rectal lymphatic plexus |
Labia minora | Labial branches of the internal pudendal artery | Tributaries to the superficial external pudendal vein which then drain to the great saphenous vein | Labial branches of the perineal nerve | Superficial inguinal nodes |
Clitoris | Superficial and deep terminal branches of the internal pudendal artery |