Saturday, November 6, 2021

What are the arteries seen after middle lobe resection during a TURP.. Badenoch's arteries



What are the arteries seen after middle lobe resection during a TURP?
A
- Capsular arteries.
B- Badenoch's arteries***
C- Floch's arteries.
D- Branches of the internal pudendal artery.
E- Branches of the superior vesical artery.

Answer B:
The arteries seen at 5 and 7 o clock after middle lobe resection are urethral branches of the inferior vesical artery known as Badenoch's arteries.

The smaller arteries seen at 2 and 10 clock are known as Floch's arteries.

The urethra is a channel that starts from the bladder level and ends at the level of the urinary bladder, mainly used to expel the urine.

Male urethra differs from female urethra: first, it is the longest (15-20 centimeters to 4-5 centimeters from the female urethra); second, it also acts as a conduit for sperm passage (in women, urethra has an exclusive urinary function).

From a histological point of view, it offers different appearances - including the so-called thethomylium (or transitional epithelium) - and two tonics: mucosa and muscle tarton.

The most common known disease that can affect the urethra is the narrowing of the urethra - urethral stenosis - and urethritis - inflammation, often on the basis of infection, of the urethra.

What is urethra?
The urethra is the tube that connects the bladder to the so-called urinary mucosa (or external urethral opening), which is used to expel some bodily fluids (mainly urine) from the body.

In anatomy, the term "mucus" refers to a hole that connects the inner part of the body to the outside and through which it passes in some cases liquid.

In the human body, there are many mumps: urethral urethra, a hole in which every ureter flows in the bladder.

The external auditory molar, a separate hole between the wing and the drum membrane. And so on.