Female urethra
Citation, DOI, disclosures and article data
At the time the article was created Henry Knipe had no recorded disclosures.
View Henry Knipe's current disclosuresAt the time the article was last revised Daniel J Bell had no recorded disclosures.
View Daniel J Bell's current disclosures- Urethra (female)
- Female urethras
The female urethra is a simple short tube, that transports urine out of the body, extending from the internal urethral orifice of the bladder to the external urethral orifice in the vestibule of the vagina.
On this page:
Gross anatomy
The female urethra measures approximately 4 cm in length. It is embedded in the anterior vaginal wall and runs with the vagina through the urogenital hiatus.
The female urethra begins at the internal urethral meatus at the bladder neck and opens in the vestibule of the vagina, 2.5 cm below the clitoris. Paraurethral (Skene) glands line the urethra at the external urethral meatus.
Relations
- anteriorly: pubic symphysis
- posteriorly: vagina
- laterally: puborectalis muscle
Arterial supply
- internal pudendal and vaginal arteries
Venous drainage
- internal pudendal and vaginal veins
Lymphatic drainage
ADVERTISEMENT: Supporters see fewer/no ads
Innervation
Variant anatomy
Radiographic features
Fluoroscopy
- micturating cystourethrogram (MCU): will reveal a "spinning-top" appearance with normal 'wavy' walls caused by the pelvic floor muscles
- retrograde urethrogram: proves troublesome because the balloon will almost completely fill the urethra but special equipment can be used
Ultrasound
- transvaginal, transperineal or transurethral approach can all be used
- imaged as tubular structure anterior to the vagina, coursing between the bladder and the vestibule of the vagina 5
CT
- the urethra can be assessed in axial plane to assess for diverticula, stones and tumor but MRI is considered the best modality 4,5
MRI
The use of an endovaginal coil has been shown to significantly improve SNR and image quality. On T1C+ or T2 axial images the female urethra appears "target-like" with four layers 3:
- lower signal outer ring
- higher intensity outer zone
- low signal inner ring
- high signal inner zone
Related pathology
The female urethra has a much shorter course and a simpler structure than the male urethra and it is less prone to disease.
References
- 1. Butler P, Mitchell A, Healy JC. Applied Radiological Anatomy. (2012) ISBN:0521766664. Read it at Google Books - Find it at Amazon
- 2. Rosse C, Gaddum-Rosse P, Hollinshead WH. Hollinshead's textbook of anatomy. Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. (1997) ISBN:0397512562. Read it at Google Books - Find it at Amazon
- 3. Ryu J, Kim B. MR imaging of the male and female urethra. Radiographics. 2001;21 (5): 1169-85. doi:10.1148/radiographics.21.5.g01se121169 - Pubmed citation
- 4. Dalrymple NC, Leyendecker JR, Oliphant M. Problem Solving in Abdominal Imaging with CD-ROM. Mosby. ISBN:0323043534. Read it at Google Books - Find it at Amazon
- 5. Chaudhari VV, Patel MK, Douek M et-al. MR imaging and US of female urethral and periurethral disease. Radiographics. 2010;30 (7): 1857-74. doi:10.1148/rg.307105054 - Pubmed citation
Incoming Links
- Vestibule of the vulva
- Male urethra
- Superficial perineal pouch
- Paraurethral duct
- Urogenital triangle
- Paraurethral glands
- Pelvis
- Urethral caruncle
- Perineal membrane
- Urethra
- Urethral injury
- Cystic lesions around vagina and female urethra
- Vaginal opening
- Deep perineal pouch
- Perineum
- Urethral diverticulum
Related articles: Anatomy: Abdominopelvic
- skeleton of the abdomen and pelvis
- muscles of the abdomen and pelvis
- spaces of the abdomen and pelvis
- anterior abdominal wall
- posterior abdominal wall
- abdominal cavity
- pelvic cavity
- perineum
- abdominal and pelvic viscera
- gastrointestinal tract
- spleen
- hepatobiliary system
-
endocrine system
-
adrenal gland
- adrenal vessels
- chromaffin cells
- variants
- pancreas
- organs of Zuckerkandl
-
adrenal gland
-
urinary system
-
kidney
- renal pelvis
- renal sinus
- avascular plane of Brodel
-
variants
- number
- fusion
- location
- shape
- ureter
- urinary bladder
- urethra
- embryology
-
kidney
- male reproductive system
-
female reproductive system
- vulva
- vagina
- uterus
- adnexa
- Fallopian tubes
- ovaries
- broad ligament (mnemonic)
- variant anatomy
- embryology
- blood supply of the abdomen and pelvis
- arteries
-
abdominal aorta
- inferior phrenic artery
- celiac artery
- superior mesenteric artery
- middle suprarenal artery
- renal artery (variant anatomy)
- gonadal artery (ovarian artery | testicular artery)
- inferior mesenteric artery
- lumbar arteries
- median sacral artery
-
common iliac artery
- external iliac artery
-
internal iliac artery (mnemonic)
- anterior division
- umbilical artery
- superior vesical artery
- obturator artery
- vaginal artery
- inferior vesical artery
- uterine artery
- middle rectal artery
-
internal pudendal artery
- inferior rectal artery
-
perineal artery
- posterior scrotal artery
- transverse perineal artery
- artery to the bulb
- deep artery of the penis/clitoris
- dorsal artery of the penis/clitoris
- inferior gluteal artery
- posterior division (mnemonic)
- variant anatomy
- anterior division
-
abdominal aorta
- portal venous system
- veins
- anastomoses
- arterioarterial anastomoses
- portal-systemic venous collateral pathways
- watershed areas
- arteries
- lymphatics
- innervation of the abdomen and pelvis
- thoracic splanchnic nerves
- lumbar plexus
-
sacral plexus
- lumbosacral trunk
- sciatic nerve
- superior gluteal nerve
- inferior gluteal nerve
- nerve to piriformis
- perforating cutaneous nerve
- posterior femoral cutaneous nerve
- parasympathetic pelvic splanchnic nerves
- pudendal nerve
- nerve to quadratus femoris and inferior gemellus muscles
- nerve to internal obturator and superior gemellus muscles
- autonomic ganglia and plexuses