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- Detailed Illustration of the Female Bladder Neck
Detailed Illustration of the Female Bladder Neck
A detailed depiction showing the anatomy of the neck portion of the adult female urinary bladder.
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Description
Centered at the inferior aspect of the adult female urinary bladder, the bladder neck (cervix vesicae) narrows into the vesical outlet and continues as the proximal urethra. The internal urethral orifice sits at the most dependent portion of the bladder base, with the vesical trigone forming a smooth, posteriorly positioned triangular region between the ureteric orifices and the outlet. Surrounding the outlet, bundles of detrusor muscle transition into the circular smooth muscle at the bladder neck, while the urethra courses inferiorly and slightly anteriorly toward the urogenital diaphragm. Small but decisive anatomy. Bladder neck anatomy matters when you are thinking about continence and obstruction in women, because outlet resistance depends on the relationship between detrusor fibers, the internal urethral orifice, and the proximal urethra under increases in intraabdominal pressure. This region is also a key landmark in pelvic surgery and endoscopy, where iatrogenic injury or scarring can contribute to bladder outlet obstruction, postoperative voiding dysfunction, or irritative lower urinary tract symptoms. A clear rendering of the vesical neck helps distinguish true bladder neck narrowing from more distal urethral pathology and frames the trigone as the stable reference area during cystoscopic orientation. Use this illustration for teaching pelvic urinary anatomy in medical school, PA programs, and urology or urogynecology modules, and for labeling in atlases or patient-facing materials that explain stress urinary incontinence, bladder neck obstruction, or periurethral surgical approaches. It also suits manuscripts and slide decks discussing cystoscopy, continence mechanisms, and postoperative bladder outlet symptoms in women. Anatomical accuracy verified by SciePro's Medical Advisory Board.